Abstract

Morphogenesis is consequence of lots of small coordinated variations that occur during development. In proliferating stages, tissue growth is coupled to changes in shape and organization. A number of studies have analyzed the topological properties of proliferating epithelia using the Drosophila wing disc as a model. These works are based in the existence of a fixed distribution of these epithelial cells according to their number of sides. Cell division, cell rearrangements or a combination of both mechanisms have been proposed to be responsible for this polygonal assembling. Here, we have used different system biology methods to compare images from two close proliferative stages that present high morphological similarity. This approach enables us to search for traces of epithelial organization. First, we show that geometrical and network characteristics of individual cells are mainly dependent on their number of sides. Second, we find a significant divergence between the distribution of polygons in epithelia from mid-third instar larva versus early prepupa. We show that this alteration propagates into changes in epithelial organization. Remarkably, only the variation in polygon distribution driven by morphogenesis leads to progression in epithelial organization. In addition, we identify the relevant features that characterize these rearrangements. Our results reveal signs of epithelial homogenization during the growing phase, before the planar cell polarity pathway leads to the hexagonal packing of the epithelium during pupal stages.

Highlights

  • Epithelia are one of the fundamental units of animal development

  • We have shown that differences in epithelial organization can be captured using ‘‘network’’ characteristics stemming from images with a large number of cells [26]

  • We have shown that dWL and dWP images present a different polygon distribution and a different epithelial organization

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Epithelia are one of the fundamental units of animal development. These tissues undergo cell shape changes and reorganizations within the epithelial plane that sculpt the final organism [1,2]. Remodeling is a finely controlled process that involves different types of rearrangements. Clear examples of them are the rearrangements induced during convergent extension or ommatidia rotation, the tissue remodeling dependent on cell apical constriction or the zippering of the embryo during the process of dorsal closure [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call