Topological Defects in Living Matter
Chapter in 50 Years of the Renormalization Group, World Scientific Publishing (2024) 795-804
Stress-shape misalignment in confluent cell layers
Nature Communications Nature Research 15:1 (2024) 3628
Abstract:
In tissue formation and repair, the epithelium undergoes complex patterns of motion driven by the active forces produced by each cell. Although the principles governing how the forces evolve in time are not yet clear, it is often assumed that the contractile stresses within the cell layer align with the axis defined by the body of each cell. Here, we simultaneously measured the orientations of the cell shape and the cell-generated contractile stresses, observing correlated, dynamic domains in which the stresses were systematically misaligned with the cell body. We developed a continuum model that decouples the orientations of contractile stress and cell body. The model recovered the spatial and temporal dynamics of the regions of misalignment in the experiments. These findings reveal that the cell controls its contractile forces independently from its shape, suggesting that the physical rules relating cell forces and cell shape are more flexible than previously thought.Cell sorting by active forces in a phase-field model of cell monolayers
(2024)
Cell sorting by active forces in a phase-field model of cell monolayers
Soft Matter Royal Society of Chemistry 20:13 (2024) 2955-2960
Abstract:
Cell sorting, the segregation of cells with different properties into distinct domains, is a key phenomenon in biological processes such as embryogenesis. We use a phase-field model of a confluent cell layer to study the role of activity in cell sorting. We find that a mixture of cells with extensile or contractile dipolar activity, and which are identical apart from their activity, quickly sort into small, elongated patches which then grow slowly in time. We interpret the sorting as driven by the different diffusivity of the extensile and contractile cells, mirroring the ordering of Brownian particles connected to different hot and cold thermostats. We check that the free energy is not changed by either partial or complete sorting, thus confirming that activity can be responsible for the ordering even in the absence of thermodynamic mechanisms.Activity-driven tissue alignment in proliferating spheroids
Soft Matter Royal Society of Chemistry 19:5 (2023) 921-931