The sex of organ geometry.
Laura BlackiePedro GasparSalem MoslehOleh LushchakLingjin KongYuhong JinAgata P ZielinskaBoxuan CaoAlessandro MineoBryon SilvaTomotsune AmekuShu En LimYanlan MaoLucia L Prieto-GodinoTodd SchoborgMarta VarelaLakshminarayanan MahadevanIrene Miguel-AliagaPublished in: Nature (2024)
Organs have a distinctive yet often overlooked spatial arrangement in the body 1-5 . We propose that there is a logic to the shape of an organ and its proximity to its neighbours. Here, by using volumetric scans of many Drosophila melanogaster flies, we develop methods to quantify three-dimensional features of organ shape, position and interindividual variability. We find that both the shapes of organs and their relative arrangement are consistent yet differ between the sexes, and identify unexpected interorgan adjacencies and left-right organ asymmetries. Focusing on the intestine, which traverses the entire body, we investigate how sex differences in three-dimensional organ geometry arise. The configuration of the adult intestine is only partially determined by physical constraints imposed by adjacent organs; its sex-specific shape is actively maintained by mechanochemical crosstalk between gut muscles and vascular-like trachea. Indeed, sex-biased expression of a muscle-derived fibroblast growth factor-like ligand renders trachea sexually dimorphic. In turn, tracheal branches hold gut loops together into a male or female shape, with physiological consequences. Interorgan geometry represents a previously unrecognized level of biological complexity which might enable or confine communication across organs and could help explain sex or species differences in organ function.