TitleForce patterning drives quasistratification and graded tissue-scale spatial order in auditory epithelia
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2026
AuthorsWeninger J, Prakash A, Raman S, Ladher Rk., Rao M, Kruse K
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume123
Paginatione2519341123
Keywords3D vertex model; basilar papilla; development.
Abstract

The ordered arrangement of mechanosensory hair cells in vertebrate auditory epithelia relies on mechanical interactions among multiple cell types. Yet, how local mechanical heterogeneity produces tissue-scale organization remains unresolved. Here we combine experiment and theory to show that spatial patterning of junctional contractility links apical surface remodeling to three-dimensional cellular organization and quasi-stratified architecture across the entire extent of the tissue. Building on previous findings on the regulation of force patterning, our results demonstrate how local junctional force heterogeneity generates graded three-dimensional cellular morphology and coordinated cellular movements at the global tissue scale. These findings identify patterned junctional mechanics as a scalable principle for organizing complex epithelia. During development, coordinated cell behaviors drive epithelial morphogenesis toward precise three-dimensional architectures essential for physiological function. How such coordination arises in epithelia composed of multiple cell types remains unclear. Here, we study development of the avian auditory epithelium comprising sensory hair cells (HCs) and nonsensory supporting cells (SCs). Initially, HCs and SCs are arranged into mosaics by Notch–Delta signaling. As development proceeds, HCs partially extrude from the epithelium, establish a tenfold gradient in apical surface area across the tissue, and rearrange with SCs to form near-hexagonal order. Using experiments combined with a three-dimensional vertex model, we show that increased contractility at apical junctions between SCs relative to HC–SC junctions drives spatial organization both within the epithelial plane and along the apical–basal axis. Consistent with experimental findings, our simulation shows systematic differences in HC apical area expansion generate opposing coordinated movements of HCs and SCs, establishing gradients in HC apical surface area and density while maintaining uniform hexagonal order. Together, these results demonstrate that spatial patterning of junctional contractility coordinates cell behavior across both the plane and depth of a mixed epithelium, producing quasi-stratified architecture and tissue-scale three-dimensional order.

URLhttps://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2519341123
DOI10.1073/pnas.2519341123
PubMed ID42096308
PubMed Central IDPMC13168546