Mesoscopic dynamic model of epithelial cell division with cell-cell junction effects

Cell division is central for embryonic development, tissue morphogenesis, and tumor growth. Experiments have evidenced that mitotic cell division is manipulated by the intercellular cues such as cell-cell junctions. However, it still remains unclear how these cortical-associated cues mechanically af...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Liu, Zong-Yuan, Li, Bo, Zhao, Zi-Long, Xu, Guang-Kui, Feng, Xi-Qiao, Gao, Huajian
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146525
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Cell division is central for embryonic development, tissue morphogenesis, and tumor growth. Experiments have evidenced that mitotic cell division is manipulated by the intercellular cues such as cell-cell junctions. However, it still remains unclear how these cortical-associated cues mechanically affect the mitotic spindle machinery, which determines the position and orientation of the cell division. In this paper, a mesoscopic dynamic cell division model is established to explore the integrated regulations of cortical polarity, microtubule pulling forces, cell deformability, and internal osmotic pressure. We show that the distributed pulling forces of astral microtubules play a key role in encoding the instructive cortical cues to orient and position the spindle of a dividing cell. The present model can not only predict the spindle orientation and position, but also capture the morphological evolution of cell rounding. The theoretical results agree well with relevant experiments both qualitatively and quantitatively. This work sheds light on the mechanical linkage between cell cortex and mitotic spindle, and holds potential in regulating cell division and sculpting tissue morphology.