Defect mediated morphogenesis
POSTER
Abstract
It has been a long-standing mystery how complex biological structures emerge during embryonic development from such seemingly uncoordinated building blocks as cells and tissues without guidance. Recent experiments suggested that misalignment in the collective structure –so called topological defects– could play a fundamental guiding role in morphogenesis. Here, we provide a theoretical study explaining how active defects interact with geometry and how this could play a crucial role in morphogenetic processes. Using a combination of computational fluid dynamics and analytics we study the instabilities of a cell monolayer in the framework of the active gel theory [1]. We consider an active polar liquid crystals coupled to an elastic deformable surface. We find that the cooperative interaction of active disclinations and geometry drives the buckling instability of the active membrane. This eventually results in the formation of long protrusions with a tentacle shape or even the nucleation of a vescicle. This work clarifies the interaction of active defects and geometry and provides potentially new insight into the physics beyond processes such as the metastatic cascade in cancer development or embryogenesis [2].
*This work is supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) and by the European Union via the ERC-CoGgrant HexaTissue. Simulations were performed on the Dutch supercomputer Snellius @ SURFSara through the grant 2021.028. The authors acknowledge M.Gloerich (UMC Utrecht) for providing us the MDCK cells.
Publication: [1] L. Hoffmann, L.N. Carenza, J. Eckert, L. Giomi. Theory of Defect Mediated Morphogenesis. Science Advances 8, eabk2712 (2022)
[2] L. Hoffmann, L.N. Carenza, L. Giomi. Tuneable defect-curvature coupling and topological transitions in active shells. arXiv:2205.06805 (submitted, under review)
Presenters
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Livio Nicola Carenza
- Leiden University - Lorentz Institute