Cita:
Trenado, C., Bonilla, L. L. & Martínez-Calvo, A. (2021). Fingering instability in spreading epithelial monolayers: roles of cell polarisation, substrate friction and contractile stresses. Soft Matter, 17(36), pp. 8276–8290.
Patrocinador:
Comunidad de Madrid Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Agradecimientos:
CT and LLB acknowledge financial support by the FEDER/Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades - Agencia Estatal de Investigación grant MTM2017-84446-C2-2-R, by the Madrid Government (Comunidad de Madrid-Spain) under the Multiannual Agreement with UC3M in the line of Excellence of University Professors (EPUC3M23), and in the context of the V PRICIT (Regional Programme of Research and Technological Innovation). AM-C acknowledges support from the Human Frontier Science Program (LT000035/2021-C), and from the FEDER/Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades - Agencia Estatal de Investigación through the project DPI2017-88201-C3-3-R, and the Red Nacional para el Desarrollo de la Microfluídica, RED2018-102829-T. The authors warmly acknowledge Ricard Alert-Zenón for useful comments and insightful advice.
Proyecto:
Gobierno de España. MTM2017-84446-C2-2-R Comunidad de Madrid. EPUC3M23 Gobierno de España. DPI2017-88201-C3-3-R
Collective cell migration plays a crucial role in many developmental processes that underlie morphogenesis, wound healing, or cancer progression. In such coordinated behaviours, cells are organised in coherent structures and actively migrate to serve differentCollective cell migration plays a crucial role in many developmental processes that underlie morphogenesis, wound healing, or cancer progression. In such coordinated behaviours, cells are organised in coherent structures and actively migrate to serve different biological purposes. In some contexts, namely during epithelial wound healing, it is well known that a migrating free-edge monolayer develops finger-like instabilities, yet the onset is still under debate. Here, by means of theory and numerical simulations, we shed light on the main mechanisms driving the instability process, analysing the linear and nonlinear dynamics of a continuum compressible polar fluid. In particular, we assess the role of cell polarisation, substrate friction, and contractile stresses. Linear theory shows that it is crucial to analyse the perturbation transient dynamics, since we unravel a plethora of crossovers between different exponential growth rates during the linear regime. Numerical simulations suggest that cell–substrate friction could be the mechanism responsible for the formation of complex finger-like structures at the edge, since it triggers secondary fingering instabilities and tip-splitting phenomena. Finally, we obtain a critical contractile stress that depends on cell–substrate friction and the initial-to-nematic length ratio, characterising an active wetting-dewetting transition. In the dewetting scenario, the monolayer retracts and becomes stable without developing finger-like structures.[+][-]