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Physical aspects of epithelial cell-cell interactions: hidden system complexities

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Physical aspects of epithelial cell-cell interactions: hidden system complexities. / Pajic-Lijakovic, Ivana; Milivojevic, Milan; McClintock, Peter V. E.
In: European Biophysics Journal, 31.08.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Pajic-Lijakovic, I, Milivojevic, M & McClintock, PVE 2024, 'Physical aspects of epithelial cell-cell interactions: hidden system complexities', European Biophysics Journal.

APA

Pajic-Lijakovic, I., Milivojevic, M., & McClintock, P. V. E. (in press). Physical aspects of epithelial cell-cell interactions: hidden system complexities. European Biophysics Journal.

Vancouver

Pajic-Lijakovic I, Milivojevic M, McClintock PVE. Physical aspects of epithelial cell-cell interactions: hidden system complexities. European Biophysics Journal. 2024 Aug 31.

Author

Pajic-Lijakovic, Ivana ; Milivojevic, Milan ; McClintock, Peter V. E. / Physical aspects of epithelial cell-cell interactions : hidden system complexities. In: European Biophysics Journal. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{37a6d28d05c94fa1ab5549f4863303cd,
title = "Physical aspects of epithelial cell-cell interactions: hidden system complexities",
abstract = "The maintenance of homeostasis and the retention of ordered epithelial cell self-organization are essential for morphogenesis, wound healing, and the spread of cancer across the epithelium. However, cell-cell interactions in an overcrowded environment introduce a diversity of complications. Such interactions arise from an interplay between the cell compressive and shear stress components that accompany increased cell packing density. They can lead to various kinds of cell rearrangement such as: the epithelial-to-mesenchymal cell state transition; live cell extrusion; and cell jamming. All of these scenarios of cell rearrangement under mechanical stress relate to changes in the strengths of the cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion contacts.The objective of this review study is twofold: first, to provide a comprehensive summary of the biological and physical factors influencing the effects of cell mechanical stress on cell-cell interactions, and the consequences of these interactions for the status of cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion contacts; and secondly, to offer a bio-physical/mathematical analysis of the aforementioned biological aspects. By presenting these two approaches in conjunction, we seek to highlight the intricate nature of biological systems, which manifests in the form of complex bio-physical/mathematical equations. Furthermore, the juxtaposition of these apparently disparate approaches underscores the importance of conducting experiments to determine the multitude of parameters that contribute to the development of these intricate bio-physical/mathematical models.",
author = "Ivana Pajic-Lijakovic and Milan Milivojevic and McClintock, {Peter V. E.}",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "31",
language = "English",
journal = "European Biophysics Journal",
issn = "0175-7571",
publisher = "Springer Verlag",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical aspects of epithelial cell-cell interactions

T2 - hidden system complexities

AU - Pajic-Lijakovic, Ivana

AU - Milivojevic, Milan

AU - McClintock, Peter V. E.

PY - 2024/8/31

Y1 - 2024/8/31

N2 - The maintenance of homeostasis and the retention of ordered epithelial cell self-organization are essential for morphogenesis, wound healing, and the spread of cancer across the epithelium. However, cell-cell interactions in an overcrowded environment introduce a diversity of complications. Such interactions arise from an interplay between the cell compressive and shear stress components that accompany increased cell packing density. They can lead to various kinds of cell rearrangement such as: the epithelial-to-mesenchymal cell state transition; live cell extrusion; and cell jamming. All of these scenarios of cell rearrangement under mechanical stress relate to changes in the strengths of the cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion contacts.The objective of this review study is twofold: first, to provide a comprehensive summary of the biological and physical factors influencing the effects of cell mechanical stress on cell-cell interactions, and the consequences of these interactions for the status of cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion contacts; and secondly, to offer a bio-physical/mathematical analysis of the aforementioned biological aspects. By presenting these two approaches in conjunction, we seek to highlight the intricate nature of biological systems, which manifests in the form of complex bio-physical/mathematical equations. Furthermore, the juxtaposition of these apparently disparate approaches underscores the importance of conducting experiments to determine the multitude of parameters that contribute to the development of these intricate bio-physical/mathematical models.

AB - The maintenance of homeostasis and the retention of ordered epithelial cell self-organization are essential for morphogenesis, wound healing, and the spread of cancer across the epithelium. However, cell-cell interactions in an overcrowded environment introduce a diversity of complications. Such interactions arise from an interplay between the cell compressive and shear stress components that accompany increased cell packing density. They can lead to various kinds of cell rearrangement such as: the epithelial-to-mesenchymal cell state transition; live cell extrusion; and cell jamming. All of these scenarios of cell rearrangement under mechanical stress relate to changes in the strengths of the cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion contacts.The objective of this review study is twofold: first, to provide a comprehensive summary of the biological and physical factors influencing the effects of cell mechanical stress on cell-cell interactions, and the consequences of these interactions for the status of cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion contacts; and secondly, to offer a bio-physical/mathematical analysis of the aforementioned biological aspects. By presenting these two approaches in conjunction, we seek to highlight the intricate nature of biological systems, which manifests in the form of complex bio-physical/mathematical equations. Furthermore, the juxtaposition of these apparently disparate approaches underscores the importance of conducting experiments to determine the multitude of parameters that contribute to the development of these intricate bio-physical/mathematical models.

M3 - Journal article

JO - European Biophysics Journal

JF - European Biophysics Journal

SN - 0175-7571

ER -