Popis: |
During morphogenesis tissue-scale forces drive large-scale deformations, yet how these forces arise from the local interplay between cellular contractility and adhesion is poorly understood. In the posterior endoderm ofDrosophilaembryos, a self-organized tissue-scale wave of actomyosin contractility and cell invagination is coupled with adhesion to the surrounding vitelline membrane to drive the polarized tissue deformation. We report here that this process emerges at the subcellular level from the mechanical coupling between Myosin-II activation and sequential adhesion/de-adhesion to the vitelline membrane. At the wavefront, integrin focal complexes anchor the actin cortex to the vitelline membrane and promote activation of Myosin-II, which in turn enhances adhesion in a positive feedback loop. Subsequently, upon detachment, cortex contraction and advective flow further amplify Myosin-II levels. Prolonged contact with the vitelline membrane increases the duration of the integrin-Myosin-II feedback, integrin adhesion and thus slows down cell detachment and wave propagation of the invagination. Finally, we show that the angle of cell detachment changes as a function of the strength of adhesion and modifies the tensile forces required for detachment to maintain wave propagation. This illustrates how the tissue-scale wave arises from subcellular mechanochemical feedbacks and tissue geometry. |