Nuclei sense complex tissue shape and direct intestinal stem cell fate
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Tissue architecture and function are influenced by mechanical cues. Yet, how cell nuclei sense forces within 3D tissues and dictate differentiation remains unknown as prior studies focused on isolated mesenchymal cells, which fail to fully predict tissue-level mechanical properties. We fill this knowledge gap utilizing live reporters and material-based organoid models. We posit the nucleus as an active mechanosensor of tissue shape, with levels of the nuclear scaffolding protein lamin-A varying across intestinal stem cell differentiation trajectory. Elevated forces on differentiated Paneth cell nuclei, in both organoids and tissue explants, increase lamin-A and nuclear wrinkling. Enhancing nuclear mechanotransduction primes cell differentiation, in otherwise stem promoting conditions, revealing that nuclear mechanics can direct stem cell fate. By engineering spatiotemporally controlled de novo tissue curvature with photo-degradable hydrogels, we direct spatially patterned lamin-A levels across mouse and human organoids of healthy and diseased origin, uncovering conserved nuclear mechanosensing pathway in epithelial tissues.
