Control of tissue flows and embryo geometry in avian gastrulation.
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Peer-reviewed
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Abstract
Embryonic tissues undergo coordinated flows during avian gastrulation to establish the body plan. Here, we elucidate how the interplay between embryonic and extraembryonic tissues affects the chick embryo's size and shape. These two distinct geometric changes are each associated with dynamic curves across which trajectories separate (kinematic repellers). Through physical modeling and experimental manipulations of both embryonic and extraembryonic tissues, we selectively eliminate either or both repellers in model and experiments, revealing their mechanistic origins. We find that embryo size is affected by the competition between extraembryonic epiboly and embryonic myosin-driven contraction-which persists when mesoderm induction is blocked. Instead, the characteristic shape change from circular to pear-shaped arises from myosin-driven cell intercalations in the mesendoderm, irrespective of epiboly. These findings elucidate modular mechanisms controlling avian gastrulation flows and provide a mechanistic basis for the independent control of embryo size and shape during development.
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Acknowledgements: We acknowledge Dillan Saunders for insightful discussions and Alexandra Neaverson, Yuri Takahashi, Apolline Delahaye, Maciej Żurowski and Sreejith Santhosh for their input and experimental support. We also acknowledge Fridtjof Brauns for suggesting Supplementary Fig. S2. GSN acknowledges support from Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship (ECF-2022-474). AP acknowledges support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) under training grant number T32-GM127235. CJW acknowledges support from the BBSRC (BB/N009789/1, BB/K00204X/1, BB/R000441/1, BB/T006781/1) and the Wellcome Trust(101468/Z/13/Z). MS acknowledges support from the Hellman Foundation, NSF PHY-2413073 and NSF CAREERPHY-2443851.
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2041-1723

