PlumX Metrics
Embed PlumX Metrics

Multi-scale quantification of tissue behavior during amniote embryo axis elongation

Development (Cambridge), ISSN: 1477-9129, Vol: 144, Issue: 23, Page: 4462-4472
2017
  • 47
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 128
    Captures
  • 1
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

Most Recent Blog

On Growth and Form at 100: Morphogenesis one century after On Growth and Form

This editorial by Thomas Lecuit and  L. Mahadevan originally appeared in Development’s Special Issue: On Growth and Form – 100 Years On     Morphogenesis, the study of how forms arise in biology, has attracted scientists for aeons. A century ago, D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson crystallized this question in his opus On Growth and Formusing a series of biological examples and geometric and physical analo

Article Description

Embryonic axis elongation is a complex multi-tissue morphogenetic process responsible for the formation of the posterior part of the amniote body. How movements and growth are coordinated between the different posterior tissues (e.g. neural tube, axial and paraxial mesoderm, lateral plate, ectoderm, endoderm) to drive axis morphogenesis remain largely unknown. Here, we use quail embryos to quantify cell behavior and tissue movements during elongation. We quantify the tissue-specific contribution to axis elongation using 3D volumetric techniques, then quantify tissue-specific parameters such as cell density and proliferation. To study cell behavior at a multi-tissue scale, we used high-resolution 4D imaging of transgenic quail embryos expressing fluorescent proteins. We developed specific tracking and image analysis techniques to analyze cell motion and compute tissue deformations in 4D. This analysis reveals extensive sliding between tissues during axis extension. Further quantification of tissue tectonics showed patterns of rotations, contractions and expansions, which are consistent with the multi-tissue behavior observed previously. Our approach defines a quantitative and multi-scale method to analyze the coordination between tissue behaviors during early vertebrate embryo morphogenetic events.

Bibliographic Details

Bénazéraf, Bertrand; Beaupeux, Mathias; Tchernookov, Martin; Wallingford, Allison; Salisbury, Tasha; Shirtz, Amelia; Shirtz, Andrew; Huss, David; Pourquié, Olivier; François, Paul; Lansford, Rusty

The Company of Biologists

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Provide Feedback

Have ideas for a new metric? Would you like to see something else here?Let us know