Collective synchrony in confluent, pulsatile epithelia
Wenhui Tang, Mehrana R. Nejad, Adrian F. Pegoraro, L. Mahadevan, Ming Guo

TL;DR
This study uncovers how collective oscillatory behaviors in epithelial cell layers depend on cell density, revealing links to tissue dynamics, cancer invasiveness, and a new continuum model capturing these phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a continuum model coupling oscillation amplitude and phase to cell density, explaining the density-dependent synchrony and defect dynamics in epithelial monolayers.
Findings
Oscillatory patterns emerge spontaneously in epithelial monolayers.
Synchrony peaks at intermediate cell densities and diminishes at higher densities.
Malignant cells show longer phase persistence and fewer topological defects.
Abstract
Collective cell migration lies at the intersection of developmental biology and non-equilibrium physics, where active processes give rise to emergent patterns that are biologically relevant. Here, we investigate dilatational modes--cycles of expansion and contraction--in epithelial monolayers, and show that the divergence of the velocity field exhibits robust, large-scale temporal oscillations. These oscillatory patterns, reminiscent of excitable media and their biological analogs, emerge spontaneously from the coupled dynamics of actively pulsing cells. We find that the temporal persistence of these oscillations varies non-monotonically with cell density: synchrony initially increases with density, reaches a maximum at intermediate densities and is lost at higher values. This trend mirrors changes in the spatial correlation length of cell-cell interactions, and the density 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.
Taxonomy
TopicsSlime Mold and Myxomycetes Research
