Material Properties Of The Embryonic Small Intestine During Buckling Morphogenesis

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Abstract

During embryonic development, tissues undergo dramatic deformations as functional morphologies are stereotypically sculpted from simple rudiments. Formation of healthy, functional organs therefore requires tight control over the material properties of embryonic tissues during development, yet the biological basis of embryonic tissue mechanics is poorly understood. The present study investigates the mechanics of the embryonic small intestine, a tissue that is compactly organized in the body cavity by a mechanical instability during development, wherein differential elongation rates between the intestinal tube and its attached mesentery create compressive forces that buckle the tube into loops with wavelength and curvature that are tightly conserved for a given species. Focusing on the intestinal tube, we combined micromechanical testing with histologic analyses and enzymatic degradation experiments to conclude that elastic fibers closely associated with intestinal smooth muscle layers are responsible for the bending stiffness of the tube, and for establishing its pronounced mechanical anisotropy. These findings provide insights into the developmental role of elastic fibers in controlling tissue stiffness, and raise new questions on the physiologic function of elastic fibers in the intestine during adulthood.

GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

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