Transient contractility attenuation reprograms epithelial cells into a protrusion-driven state that drives tissue fluidization

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Abstract

Collective cell migration drives tissue morphogenesis, repair and remodeling, and is often accompanied by transitions from solid-like to fluid-like states. While such tissue fluidization has been linked to physical parameters such as cell density, shape and activity, how it is actively regulated by mechano-chemical interplay remains unclear. Previous research has shown that transient attenuation of actomyosin contractility induces a transition from pulsatile, spatially confined motion to coherent, persistent long-range collective flow; however, the underlying cellular and signaling mechanisms remain unclear. Here we uncover the mechanistic basis by which transient perturbation of cell contractility reprograms the migration mode of confluent epithelial cells into a leader-like, fluidizing state, by combining kinase-reporter live imaging, force measurements and mathematical modeling. This transition arises from coordinated changes in cell morphology, mechanics, and signaling, including reduced cortical tension, enhanced cell–substrate adhesion and traction forces, and increased tissue deformability. At the signaling level, this process is accompanied by a rewiring of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)-mediated mechanotransduction toward a protrusion-coupled mode that sustains migration even under fully confluent conditions. Consistently, a multicellular computational model further demonstrates that protrusion-driven migration is sufficient to promote shape–velocity alignment and drive a transition from caged to flocking-like collective states. Together, our results identify transient mechanical relaxation as a trigger for an intrinsic leader-like state that fluidizes epithelial confluent tissues through coordinated remodeling of cytoskeletal, adhesive, and signaling systems.

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