Abstract

Generating and maintaining gradients of cell density and extracellular matrix (ECM) components is a prerequisite for the development of functionality of healthy tissue. Therefore, gaining insights into the drivers of spatial organization of cells and the role of ECM during tissue morphogenesis is vital. In a 3D model system of tissue morphogenesis, a fibronectin-FRET sensor recently revealed the existence of two separate fibronectin populations with different conformations in microtissues, i.e. ‘compact and adsorbed to collagen’ versus ‘extended and fibrillar’ fibronectin that does not colocalize with the collagen scaffold. Here we asked how the presence of fibronectin might drive this cell-induced tissue morphogenesis, more specifically the formation of gradients in cell density and ECM composition. Microtissues were engineered in a high-throughput model system containing rectangular microarrays of 12 posts, which constrained fibroblast-populated collagen gels, remodeled by the contractile cells into trampoline-shaped microtissues. Fibronectin’s contribution during the tissue maturation process was assessed using fibronectin-knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts (Fn-/- MEFs) and floxed equivalents (Fnf/f MEFs), in fibronectin-depleted growth medium with and without exogenously added plasma fibronectin (full-length, or various fragments). In the absence of full-length fibronectin, Fn-/- MEFs remained homogenously distributed throughout the cell-contracted collagen gels. In contrast, in the presence of full-length fibronectin, both cell types produced shell-like tissues with a predominantly cell-free compacted collagen core and a peripheral surface layer rich in cells. Single cell assays then revealed that Fn-/- MEFs applied lower total strain energy on nanopillar arrays coated with either fibronectin or vitronectin when compared to Fnf/f MEFs, but that the presence of exogenously added plasma fibronectin rescued their contractility. While collagen decoration of single fibronectin fibers enhanced the non-persistent migration of both Fnf/f and Fn-/- MEFs, the migration speed was increased for Fn-/- MEFs on plasma fibronectin fibers compared to Fnf/f MEFs. In contrast, the average speed was the same for all cells on collagen-coated Fn fibers. A Fn-FRET sensor revealed that fibronectin on average was more extended on the microtissue surface compared to fibronectin in the core. Gradients of collagen-to-fibronectin ratios and of the fraction of collagen-adsorbed to stretched fibrillar fibronectin conformations might thereby provide critical cell migration cues. This study highlights a dominant role for fibronectin in tissue morphogenesis and the development of tissue heterogeneities.

Highlights

  • Healthy connective tissue maintains a function-specific hierarchical organization of cells and extracellular matrix (ECM)

  • Fibronectin is required for the accumulation of cells at the microtissue periphery To address the question of how fibronectin impacts cell-induced microtissue morphogenesis, Fn-/- mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) and Fnf/f MEFs were mixed with collagen type I and seeded in microwells containing tissue-constraining posts (Fig 1A–1C)

  • Since the underpinning mechanisms that drive the formation of cell gradients and gradients of ECM composition in tissues and engineered tissue scaffolds are not yet resolved [9,10,11,12,20, 21,22,27,28,41,42,43,45,57], we exploited 3D collagen-derived microtissues as model system to investigate the role of fibronectin in such processes

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Summary

Introduction

Healthy connective tissue maintains a function-specific hierarchical organization of cells and ECM. The increase in fibroblast density towards tissue surfaces in reconstituted collagenous microtissues, approximately 40μm thick, was correlated with an increasingly anisotropic distribution of fibronectin (Fn) [10,13,15]. Insight is still missing regarding the underlying mechanisms that drive tissue morphogenesis to generate such cell density gradients. It is unknown what the role of ECM is and how it affects spatial gradients of the associated processes, such as cell migration and force generation. In the current study we asked how fibronectin in the context of collagen gels impacts cell-induced tissue morphogenesis, the depth-dependent distribution of cells and their ECM

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