Stress-shape misalignment in confluent cell layers

ORAL

Abstract

This study investigates the relationship between cell shape and cell-generated stresses in confluent cell layers. Using simultaneous measurements of cell shape orientation and cell-generated contractile forces in MDCK and LP-9 colonies, we report the emergence of correlated, dynamic domains in which misalignment between the directors defined by cell shape and by contractile forces reaches up to 90, effectively creating extensile domains in a monolayer of contractile cells. To understand this misalignment, we develop a continuum model that decouples the orientation of cell-generated active forces from the orientation of the cell shapes. This challenges the prevailing understanding that cells throughout a tissue create either contractile or extensile forces, and the validity of the usual active nematic models of cell motility where active forces are strictly slaved to cell shape orientation.

* M. R. Nejad acknowledges the support of the Clarendon fund scholarship. L. J. Ruske acknowledges the support of the European Commission's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 812780. This project was funded by the National Science Foundation grant number CMMI-2205141.

Presenters

  • Mehrana R. Nejad

    University of Harvard

Authors

  • Mehrana R. Nejad

    University of Harvard

  • Liam Ruske

    University of Oxford

  • Molly McCord

    University of Wisconsin–Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Jun Zhang

    University of Wisconsin–Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • Guanming Zhang

    New York University

  • Julia Yeomans

    University of Oxford

  • Jacob Notbohm

    University of Wisconsin–Madison