Cellular motion is a key feature of tissue morphogenesis and is often driven by migration. However, migration need not explain cell motion in contexts where there is little free space or no obvious substrate, such as those found during organogenesis of mesenchymal organs including the embryonic skull. Through ex vivo imaging, biophysical modeling, and perturbation experiments, we find that mechanical feedback between cell fate and stiffness drives bone expansion and controls bone size in vivo. This mechanical feedback system is sufficient to propagate a wave of differentiation that establishes a collagen gradient which we find sufficient to describe patterns of osteoblast motion. Our work provides a mechanism for coordinated motion that may not rely upon cell migration but on emergent properties of the mesenchymal collective. Identification of such alternative mechanisms of mechanochemical coupling between differentiation and morphogenesis will help in understanding how directed cellular motility arises in complex environments with inhomogeneous material properties.
Self-propagating wave drives morphogenesis of skull bones in vivo.
自传播波驱动颅骨在体内的形态发生
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作者:Dang Yiteng, Lattner Johanna, Lahola-Chomiak Adrian A, Afonso Diana Alves, Ulbricht Elke, Taubenberger Anna, Rulands Steffen, Tabler Jacqueline M
| 期刊: | Nature Communications | 影响因子: | 15.700 |
| 时间: | 2025 | 起止号: | 2025 May 9; 16(1):4330 |
| doi: | 10.1038/s41467-025-59164-9 | 研究方向: | 骨科研究 |
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