Published September 23, 2021 | Version v1
Publication

The complex three-dimensional organization of epithelial tissues

Description

Understanding the cellular organization of tissues is key to developmental biology. In order to deal with this complex problem, researchers have taken advantage of reductionist approaches to reveal fundamental morphogenetic mechanisms and quantitative laws. For epithelia, their two-dimensional representation as polygonal tessellations has proved successful for understanding tissue organization. Yet, epithelial tissues bend and fold to shape organs in three dimensions. In this context, epithelial cells are too often simplified as prismatic blocks with a limited plasticity. However, there is increasing evidence that a realistic approach, even from a reductionist perspective, must include apico-basal intercalations (i.e. scutoidal cell shapes) for explaining epithelial organization convincingly. Here, we present an historical perspective about the tissue organization problem. Specifically, we analyze past and recent breakthroughs, and discuss how and why simplified, but realistic, in silico models require scutoidal features to address key morphogenetic events.

Abstract

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación PI13/01,347, 2019-105566GB-100, PID2019-103900GB-100

Abstract

Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad BFU2016-74975-P

Abstract

Junta de Andalucía P18-FR-631

Abstract

Lehigh University JB-FIG-2019

Additional details

Created:
March 25, 2023
Modified:
December 1, 2023