Inter-plane feedback coordinates cell morphogenesis and maintains 3D tissue organization in the Drosophila pupal retina.
Xiao SunJacob DeckerNicelio Sanchez-LuegeIlaria RebayPublished in: Development (Cambridge, England) (2024)
How complex organs coordinate cellular morphogenetic events to achieve three-dimensional (3D) form is a central question in development. The question is uniquely tractable in the late Drosophila pupal retina, where cells maintain stereotyped contacts as they elaborate the specialized cytoskeletal structures that pattern the apical, basal and longitudinal planes of the epithelium. In this study, we combined cell type-specific genetic manipulation of the cytoskeletal regulator Abelson (Abl) with 3D imaging to explore how the distinct cellular morphogenetic programs of photoreceptors and interommatidial pigment cells (IOPCs) organize tissue pattern to support retinal integrity. Our experiments show that photoreceptor and IOPC terminal differentiation is unexpectedly interdependent, connected by an intercellular feedback mechanism that coordinates and promotes morphogenetic change across orthogonal tissue planes to ensure correct 3D retinal pattern. We propose that genetic regulation of specialized cellular differentiation programs combined with inter-plane mechanical feedback confers spatial coordination to achieve robust 3D tissue morphogenesis.
Keyphrases
- diabetic retinopathy
- induced apoptosis
- optic nerve
- cell cycle arrest
- optical coherence tomography
- high resolution
- palliative care
- public health
- genome wide
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- gene expression
- cross sectional
- cell therapy
- cell death
- transcription factor
- oxidative stress
- mass spectrometry
- bone marrow
- cell proliferation
- tyrosine kinase
- photodynamic therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- fluorescence imaging