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Decoupling the Roles of Cell Shape and Mechanical Stress in Orienting and Cueing Epithelial Mitosis.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Nestor-Bergmann, Alexander  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0013-2607
Stooke-Vaughan, Georgina A 
Goddard, Georgina K 
Starborg, Tobias 
Jensen, Oliver E 

Abstract

Distinct mechanisms involving cell shape and mechanical force are known to influence the rate and orientation of division in cultured cells. However, uncoupling the impact of shape and force in tissues remains challenging. Combining stretching of Xenopus tissue with mathematical methods of inferring relative mechanical stress, we find separate roles for cell shape and mechanical stress in orienting and cueing division. We demonstrate that division orientation is best predicted by an axis of cell shape defined by the position of tricellular junctions (TCJs), which align with local cell stress rather than tissue-level stress. The alignment of division to cell shape requires functional cadherin and the localization of the spindle orientation protein, LGN, to TCJs but is not sensitive to relative cell stress magnitude. In contrast, proliferation rate is more directly regulated by mechanical stress, being correlated with relative isotropic stress and decoupled from cell shape when myosin II is depleted.

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Keywords

Xenopus, cell division, cell proliferation, cell shape, epithelium, force, mechanical stress, mitosis, mitotic spindle, vertex model, Animals, Cell Shape, Epithelial Cells, Female, Intercellular Junctions, Male, Mitosis, Models, Theoretical, Spindle Apparatus, Stress, Mechanical, Xenopus laevis

Journal Title

Cell Rep

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2211-1247
2211-1247

Volume Title

26

Publisher

Elsevier BV