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Differential adhesion in model systems

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TLDR
The differential adhesion hypothesis (DAH) is grounded in the same set of physical principles governing the interaction of immiscible fluids and thus provides a rigorous conceptual framework connecting the chemistry of cell adhesion to the physics underlying cell and tissue segregation.
Abstract
During embryonic development, cells or groups of cells migrate from their locations of origin to assume their correct anatomical positions. Intercellular adhesion plays an active and instructive role in orchestrating this process. Precisely how adhesion provides spatial positioning information is a subject of intense interest. In the 1960s, Steinberg proposed the differential adhesion hypothesis (DAH) to explain how differences in the intensity of cell adhesion could give rise to predictable spatial interactions between different cell types. The DAH is grounded in the same set of physical principles governing the interaction of immiscible fluids and thus provides a rigorous conceptual framework connecting the chemistry of cell adhesion to the physics underlying cell and tissue segregation. Testing the DAH required the development of methods to measure intercellular cohesion and of assays to accurately assess relative spatial position between cells. The DAH has been experimentally verified and computationally simulated. Moreover, evidence concerning the role of differential adhesion in a number of morphodynamic events is accumulating. It is clear that differential adhesion is a major driving force in various aspects of embryonic development, but recent studies have also advanced the concept that other factors, such as cortical tension and elasticity, may also be involved in fine tuning, or even driving the process. It is likely that an interplay between adhesion and these other factors co-operate to generate the forces required for tissue self-organization.

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Citations
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Interstitial fluid osmolarity modulates the action of differential tissue surface tension in progenitor cell segregation during gastrulation.

TL;DR: It is shown that germ layers display indistinguishable TST within the gastrulating embryo, arguing against differential TST driving germ layer progenitor cell segregation in vivo, and that the osmolarity of the interstitial fluid is an important factor that influences germ layer TST in vivo.
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Aggregate formation and suspension culture of human pluripotent stem cells and differentiated progeny

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the aggregation and rotary suspension method can be used to support culture and maintenance of hPSC-derived cell populations representing each of the three germ layers, underscoring the utility of this platform for culturing many different cell types.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative methods for analyzing cell-cell adhesion in development.

TL;DR: These techniques provide a comprehensive toolbox to characterize different cell-cell adhesion phenomena during development and a recently introduced method to quantitate cell-generated forces directly in living tissues based on the deformation of oil microdroplets functionalized with adhesion receptor ligands is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

iPSC-Derived Vascular Cell Spheroids as Building Blocks for Scaffold-Free Biofabrication.

TL;DR: In this article, iPSC-derived ECFC and SMFC were labeled with tdTomato and eGFP, and formed in ultra-low adhesive wells, and their dynamic proprieties were studied by time-lapse microscopy, or by confocal microscopy.
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Dscam Proteins Direct Dendritic Targeting through Adhesion.

TL;DR: It is shown that Dscam2 directs dendritic targeting of another lamina neuron, L4, through homophilic adhesion, which ensures tiling of the lamina neuropil through heterotypic interactions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Models for the specific adhesion of cells to cells

TL;DR: The force required to separate two cells is shown to be greater than the expected electrical forces between cells, and of the same order of magnitude as the forces required to pull gangliosides and perhaps some integral membrane proteins out of the cell membrane.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell surface mechanics and the control of cell shape, tissue patterns and morphogenesis.

TL;DR: A range of developmental phenomena can be explained by the regulation of cell surface tension, and the framework that emerges from diverse disciplines such as cell biology, physics and developmental biology points to adhesion and cortical actin networks as regulators ofcell surface mechanics.
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The Influence of Cell Mechanics, Cell-Cell Interactions, and Proliferation on Epithelial Packing

TL;DR: A vertex model is used for the epithelial junctional network in which cell packing geometries correspond to stable and stationary network configurations and accounts qualitatively and quantitatively for the observed packing geometry in the wing disc and its response to perturbation by laser ablation.
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