Cut it out: Out-of-plane stresses in cell sheet folding of Volvox embryos
Pierre A. Haas, Stephanie S. M. H. H\"ohn

TL;DR
This study uncovers and quantifies out-of-plane residual stresses in cell sheet folding during Volvox embryo inversion, revealing their role alongside cell wedging in guiding tissue morphogenesis.
Contribution
It introduces a combined experimental and mechanical modeling approach to measure and analyze out-of-plane stresses in curved tissues during development.
Findings
Out-of-plane residual stresses persist during embryo inversion.
Mechanical properties can be quantified from tissue unfurling after ablation.
Tissue exhibits an adaptive response to out-of-plane stresses.
Abstract
The folding of cellular monolayers pervades embryonic development and disease. It results from stresses out of the plane of the tissue, often caused by cell shape changes including cell wedging via apical constriction. These local cellular changes need not however be compatible with the global shape of the tissue. Such geometric incompatibilities lead to residual stresses that have out-of-plane components in curved tissues, but the mechanics and function of these out-of-plane stresses are poorly understood, perhaps because their quantification has proved challenging. Here, we overcome this difficulty by combining laser ablation experiments and a mechanical model to reveal that such out-of-plane residual stresses exist and also persist during the inversion of the spherical embryos of the green alga Volvox. We show how to quantify the mechanical properties of the curved tissue from its…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Advanced Materials and Mechanics · Silk-based biomaterials and applications
