Stress distribution in contractile cell monolayers
Yucheng Huo, Kexin Guo, Massimo Paradiso, K. Jimmy Hsia

TL;DR
This study combines experimental and computational methods to map stress patterns in contractile cell layers, revealing how mechanical forces influence cellular organization and structure in biological tissues.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative framework for analyzing stress distribution and mechanical anisotropy in active cellular monolayers, linking forces to structural organization.
Findings
Contractile monolayers show anisotropic stress patterns with positive maximum and negative minimum principal stresses.
Distinct stress patterns are observed around topological defects, correlating with cell alignment and morphology.
Mechanical stresses guide cell arrangement and are conserved across different contractile cell types.
Abstract
Collective behaviors in cellular systems are regulated not only by biochemical signalling pathways but also by intercellular mechanical forces, whose quantification in contractile monolayers remains poorly understood. Here, by integrating traction force microscopy and numerical simulations, we reconstruct the stress distribution in C2C12 myoblast monolayers to reveal the roles of local mechanical forces in determining the collective cellular structures. We find that contractile monolayers exhibit positive maximum and negative minimum principal stresses, reflecting the intrinsic anisotropy of active tension. Distinct stress patterns emerge around topological defects, coinciding with singularities in cell alignment, density, and morphology, indicating a strong coupling between mechanical forces and structural organization. Moreover, tensile stresses are preferentially transmitted along…
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