Universal geometric constraints during epithelial jamming
Lior Atia, Dapeng Bi, Yasha Sharma, Jennifer A. Mitchel, Bomi Gweon,, Stephan Koehler, Stephen J. DeCamp, Bo Lan, Rebecca Hirsch, Adrian F., Pegoraro, Kyu Ha Lee, Jacqueline Starr, David A. Weitz, Adam C. Martin,, Jin-Ah Park, James P. Butler, Jeffrey J. Fredberg

TL;DR
This study reveals a universal geometric relationship governing cell shape and variation in epithelial layers, linking jamming states to cell morphology across diverse biological systems.
Contribution
It uncovers a universal geometric constraint on cell shape variation that applies across different epithelial systems and links jamming to cell morphology.
Findings
Cell shape and variation follow a common distribution across systems.
Cell shape becomes less elongated as layers become more jammed.
Proximity to jamming state determines cell shape features.
Abstract
As an injury heals, an embryo develops, or a carcinoma spreads, epithelial cells systematically change their shape. In each of these processes cell shape is studied extensively, whereas variation of shape from cell-to-cell is dismissed most often as biological noise. But where do cell shape and variation of cell shape come from? Here we report that cell shape and shape variation are mutually constrained through a relationship that is purely geometrical. That relationship is shown to govern maturation of the pseudostratified bronchial epithelial layer cultured from both non-asthmatic and asthmatic donors as well as formation of the ventral furrow in the epithelial monolayer of the Drosophila embryo in vivo. Across these and other vastly different epithelial systems, cell shape variation collapses to a family of distributions that is common to all and potentially universal. That…
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