Mechanics of tissue compaction

J.-L. Maître, H. Turlier. Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology 47, 110-117 (2015).

During embryonic development, tissues deform by a succession and combination of morphogenetic processes. Tissue compaction is the morphogenetic process by which a tissue adopts a tighter structure. Recent studies characterized the respective roles of cells’ adhesive and contractile properties in tissue compaction. In this review, we formalize the mechanical and molecular principles of tissue compaction and we analyze through the prism of this framework several morphogenetic events: the compaction of the early mouse embryo, the formation of the fly retina, the segmentation of somites and the separation of germ layers during gastrulation.

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Pulsatile cell-autonomous contractility drives compaction in the mouse embryo