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Merck
CN

Organ size control via hydraulically gated oscillations.

Development (Cambridge, England) (2017-12-01)
Teresa Ruiz-Herrero, Kévin Alessandri, Basile V Gurchenkov, Pierre Nassoy, L Mahadevan
ABSTRACT

Hollow vesicular tissues of various sizes and shapes arise in biological organs such as ears, guts, hearts, brains and even entire organisms. Regulating their size and shape is crucial for their function. Although chemical signaling has been thought to play a role in the regulation of cellular processes that feed into larger scales, it is increasingly recognized that mechanical forces are involved in the modulation of size and shape at larger length scales. Motivated by a variety of examples of tissue cyst formation and size control that show simultaneous growth and size oscillations, we create a minimal theoretical framework for the growth and dynamics of a soft, fluid-permeable, spherical shell. We show that these shells can relieve internal pressure by bursting intermittently, shrinking and re-growing, providing a simple mechanism by which hydraulically gated oscillations can regulate size. To test our theory, we develop an

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Caspase 3 Antibody, active (cleaved) form, Chemicon®, from rabbit
Sigma-Aldrich
Triton X-100, laboratory grade