Epithelial Wound Healing Coordinates Distinct Actin Network Architectures to Conserve Mechanical Work and Balance Power
ORAL
Abstract
How cells with diverse morphologies and cytoskeletal architectures modulate their mechanical behaviors to drive robust collective motion within tissues is poorly understood. During wound repair within epithelial monolayers in vitro, cells coordinate the assembly of branched and bundled actin networks to regulate the total mechanical work produced by collective cell motion. Using traction force microscopy, we show that the balance of actin network architectures optimizes the wound closure rate and the magnitude of the mechanical work. These values are constrained by the effective power exerted by the monolayer, which is conserved and independent of actin architectures. Using a cell-based physical model, we show that the rate at which mechanical work is done by the monolayer is limited by the transformation between actin network architectures and differential regulation of cell-substrate friction. These results and our proposed mechanisms provide a robust quantitative model for how cells collectively coordinate their non-equilibrium behaviors to dynamically regulate tissue-scale mechanical output.
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Presenters
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Michael Murrell
Yale Univ, Yale University
Authors
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Alan Tabatabai
Yale Univ
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Visar Ajeti
Yale Univ
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Andrew Fleszar
Yale Univ
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Michael F Staddon
Physics, University College London
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Daniel S. Seara
Yale Univ
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Christian Suarez
Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Chicago
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Muhammad Yousafzai
Yale Univ
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Dapeng Bi
Northeastern University, Physics, Northeastern University
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Dave Kovar
Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Chicago
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Shiladitya Banerjee
Physics, University College London
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Michael Murrell
Yale Univ, Yale University