Institute of Biophysics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana, Lipiceva 2, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
J Theor Biol. 2009 Oct 7;260(3):333-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2009.06.021. Epub 2009 Jul 1.
In order to fully understand the epithelial mechanics it is essential to integrate different levels of epithelial organization. In this work, we propose a theoretical approach for connecting the macroscopic mechanical properties of a monolayered epithelium to the mechanical properties at the cellular level. The analysis is based on the established mechanical models-at the macroscopic scale the epithelium is described within the mechanics of thin layers, while the cellular level is modeled in terms of the cellular surface (cortical) tension and the intercellular adhesion. The macroscopic elastic energy of the epithelium is linked to the energy of an average epithelial cell. The epithelial equilibrium state is determined by energy minimization and the macroscopic elastic moduli are calculated from deformations around the equilibrium. The results indicate that the epithelial equilibrium state is defined by the ratio between the adhesion strength and the cellular surface tension. The lower and the upper bounds for this ratio are estimated. If the ratio is small, the epithelium is cuboidal, if it is large, the epithelium becomes columnar. Importantly, it is found that the cellular cortical tension and the intercellular adhesion alone cannot produce the flattened squamous epithelium. Any difference in the surface tension between the apical and basal cellular sides bends the epithelium towards the side with the larger surface tension. Interestingly, the analysis shows that the epithelial area expansivity modulus and the shear modulus depend only on the cellular surface tension and not on the intercellular adhesion. The results are presented in a general analytical form, and are thus applicable to a variety of monolayered epithelia, without relying on the specifics of numerical finite-element methods. In addition, by using the standard theoretical tools for multi-laminar systems, the results can be applied to epithelia consisting of layers with different mechanical properties.
为了全面理解上皮力学,整合上皮组织的不同层次至关重要。在这项工作中,我们提出了一种理论方法,将单层上皮的宏观力学性质与细胞水平的力学性质联系起来。该分析基于已建立的力学模型——在宏观尺度上,上皮组织在薄膜力学的范畴内进行描述,而细胞水平则通过细胞表面(皮质)张力和细胞间黏附来建模。上皮组织的宏观弹性能量与平均上皮细胞的能量相关联。上皮组织的平衡状态由能量最小化确定,宏观弹性模量则由平衡状态下的变形计算得出。结果表明,上皮组织的平衡状态由黏附强度与细胞表面张力的比值决定。还对该比值的下限和上限进行了估计。如果该比值较小,则上皮组织为立方形,如果该比值较大,则上皮组织为柱状。重要的是,发现细胞皮质张力和细胞间黏附本身无法产生扁平的鳞状上皮。细胞顶侧和底侧之间的表面张力差异会使上皮组织向表面张力较大的一侧弯曲。有趣的是,分析表明上皮组织的面积膨胀模量和剪切模量仅取决于细胞表面张力,而与细胞间黏附无关。结果以一般的分析形式呈现,因此适用于各种单层上皮组织,而无需依赖数值有限元方法的具体情况。此外,通过使用多层系统的标准理论工具,该结果可应用于具有不同力学性质的层状上皮组织。