A hydraulic instability drives the cell death decision in the nematode germline.
Nicolas T ChartierArghyadip MukherjeeJulia PfanzelterSebastian FürthauerBen T LarsonAnatol W FritschRana AminiMoritz KreysingFrank JülicherStephan W GrillPublished in: Nature physics (2021)
Oocytes are large cells that develop into an embryo upon fertilization1. As interconnected germ cells mature into oocytes, some of them grow-typically at the expense of others that undergo cell death2-4. We present evidence that in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, this cell-fate decision is mechanical and related to tissue hydraulics. An analysis of germ cell volumes and material fluxes identifies a hydraulic instability that amplifies volume differences and causes some germ cells to grow and others to shrink, a phenomenon that is related to the two-balloon instability5. Shrinking germ cells are extruded and they die, as we demonstrate by artificially reducing germ cell volumes via thermoviscous pumping6. Our work reveals a hydraulic symmetry-breaking transition central to the decision between life and death in the nematode germline.