Determining physical properties of the cell cortex
A. Saha, M. Nishikawa, M. Behrndt, C.-P. Heisenberg, F. J\"ulicher, S., W. Grill

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method to measure key physical parameters of the cell cortex in vivo by analyzing its response to laser ablation, providing insights into actomyosin mechanics and tissue morphogenesis.
Contribution
The study presents a novel approach to determine the Maxwell time, hydrodynamic length, and active stress ratio of the actomyosin cortex using laser ablation and physical modeling.
Findings
Consistent estimates of physical parameters across two different biological systems.
Method accurately measures cortex relaxation dynamics and stress propagation.
Provides a robust tool for studying actomyosin mechanics in vivo.
Abstract
Actin and myosin assemble into a thin layer of a highly dynamic network underneath the membrane of eukaryotic cells. This network generates the forces that drive cell and tissue-scale morphogenetic processes. The effective material properties of this active network determine large-scale deformations and other morphogenetic events. For example,the characteristic time of stress relaxation (the Maxwell time)in the actomyosin sets the time scale of large-scale deformation of the cortex. Similarly, the characteristic length of stress propagation (the hydrodynamic length) sets the length scale of slow deformations, and a large hydrodynamic length is a prerequisite for long-ranged cortical flows. Here we introduce a method to determine physical parameters of the actomyosin cortical layer (in vivo). For this we investigate the relaxation dynamics of the cortex in response to laser ablation in…
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