Geometry of epithelial cells provides a robust method for image based inference of stress within tissues
Nicholas Noll, Sebastian J. Streichan, Boris I. Shraiman

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Geometrical Variation Method (GVM), a novel image-based approach that infers tissue stress from cellular geometry in epithelial tissues, overcoming noise sensitivity and boundary condition issues.
Contribution
The paper presents a new variational approach, GVM, that exploits geometry-stress duality to accurately infer tissue stress from images of epithelial cells.
Findings
GVM predicts cellular stress with 80% correlation to myosin patterns.
GVM effectively estimates in vivo tissue stress non-destructively.
Most myosin II activity relates to internal force balance, not external deformation.
Abstract
Cellular mechanics plays an important role in epithelial morphogenesis, a process wherein cells reshape and rearrange to produce tissue-scale deformations. However, the study of tissue-scale mechanics is impaired by the difficulty of direct measurement of stress in-vivo. Alternative, image-based inference schemes aim to estimate stress from snapshots of cellular geometry but are challenged by sensitivity to fluctuations and measurement noise as well as the dependence on boundary conditions. Here we overcome these difficulties by introducing a new variational approach - the Geometrical Variation Method (GVM) - which exploits the fundamental duality between stress and cellular geometry that exists in the state of mechanical equilibrium of discrete mechanical networks that approximate cellular tissues. In the Geometrical Variation Method, the two dimensional apical geometry of an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Spaceflight effects on biology · Microtubule and mitosis dynamics
