Coherent motion of monolayer sheets under confinement and its pathological implications
S.S. Soumya, Animesh Gupta, Andrea Cugno, Luca Deseri, Kaushik Dayal,, Dibyendu Das, Shamik Sen, Mandar M. Inamdar

TL;DR
This study models how epithelial cell sheets exhibit coherent rotation under confinement, revealing how physical parameters and perturbations like cell division influence tissue motion and potential pathological states.
Contribution
It introduces a cell-center based model demonstrating the emergence of coherent tissue rotation and explores how physical and biological factors affect this motion.
Findings
Coherent rotation arises from simple polarization-velocity alignment rules.
Physical parameters like cell density and stiffness dictate motion patterns.
Cell division can reverse the direction of tissue rotation.
Abstract
Coherent angular rotation of epithelial cells is thought to contribute to many vital physiological processes including tissue morphogenesis and glandular formation. However, factors regulating this motion, and the implications of this motion if perturbed remain incompletely understood. In the current study, we address these questions using a cell-center based model in which cells are polarized, motile, and interact with the neighboring cells via harmonic forces. We demonstrate that, a simple evolution rule in which the polarization of any cell tends to orient with its velocity vector can induce coherent motion in geometrically confined environments. In addition to recapitulating coherent rotational motion observed in experiments, our results also show the presence of radial movements and tissue behavior that can vary between solid-like and fluid-like. We show that the pattern of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
