RRC ID 84015
著者 Dai A, Ben Amar M.
タイトル Cyclic muscle contractions reinforce the actomyosin motors and mediate the full elongation of C. elegans embryo.
ジャーナル Elife
Abstract The paramount importance of mechanical forces in morphogenesis and embryogenesis is widely recognized, but understanding the mechanism at the cellular and molecular level remains challenging. Because of its simple internal organization, Caenorhabditis elegans is a rewarding system of study. As demonstrated experimentally, after an initial period of steady elongation driven by the actomyosin network, muscle contractions operate a quasi-periodic sequence of bending, rotation, and torsion, that leads to the final fourfold size of the embryos before hatching. How actomyosin and muscles contribute to embryonic elongation is investigated here theoretically. A filamentary elastic model that converts stimuli generated by biochemical signals in the tissue into driving forces, explains embryonic deformation under actin bundles and muscle activity, and dictates mechanisms of late elongation based on the effects of energy conversion and dissipation. We quantify this dynamic transformation by stretches applied to a cylindrical structure that mimics the body shape in finite elasticity, obtaining good agreement and understanding of both wild-type and mutant embryos at all stages.
巻・号 12
公開日 2024-6-20
DOI 10.7554/eLife.90505
PII 90505
PMID 38900560
PMC PMC11189629
MeSH Actomyosin* / metabolism Animals Biomechanical Phenomena Caenorhabditis elegans* / embryology Embryo, Nonmammalian* / embryology Embryo, Nonmammalian* / metabolism Embryo, Nonmammalian* / physiology Embryonic Development Models, Biological Morphogenesis Muscle Contraction* / physiology
リソース情報
線虫 tm403