Patterning in stratified epithelia depends on cell–cell adhesion

Keratinocytes 0301 basic medicine Cell Differentiation Epithelial Cells Adherens Junctions Epithelium Mice 03 medical and health sciences Cell Adhesion Humans Animals Research Articles Cells, Cultured Cell Proliferation
DOI: 10.26508/lsa.202402893 Publication Date: 2024-07-18T14:20:24Z
ABSTRACT
Epithelia consist of proliferating and differentiating cells that often display patterned arrangements. However, the mechanism regulating these spatial arrangements remains unclear. Here, we show that cell–cell adhesion dictates multicellular patterning in stratified epithelia. When cultured keratinocytes, a type of epithelial cell in the skin, are subjected to starvation, they spontaneously develop a pattern characterized by areas of high and low cell density. Pharmacological and knockout experiments show that adherens junctions are essential for patterning, whereas the mathematical model that only considers local cell–cell adhesion as a source of attractive interactions can form regions with high/low cell density. This phenomenon, called cell–cell adhesion-induced patterning (CAIP), influences cell differentiation and proliferation through Yes-associated protein modulation. Starvation, which induces CAIP, enhances the stratification of the epithelia. These findings highlight the intrinsic self-organizing property of epithelial cells.
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