Open access
Date
2021-10-23Type
- Working Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
Neurulation is the process in early vertebrate embryonic development during which the neural plate folds to form the neural tube. Spinal neural tube folding in the posterior neuropore changes over time, first showing a median hingepoint, then both the median hingepoint and dorsolateral hingepoints, followed by dorsolateral hingepoints only. The biomechanical mechanism of hingepoint formation in the mammalian neural tube is poorly understood. Here, we employ a mechanical finite element model to study neural tube formation. The computational model mimics the mammalian neural tube using microscopy data from mouse and human embryos. While intrinsic curvature at the neural plate midline has been hypothesized to drive neural tube folding, intrinsic curvature was not sufficient for tube closure in our simulations. We achieved neural tube closure with an alternative model combining mesoderm expansion, non-neural ectoderm expansion and neural plate adhesion to the notochord. Dorsolateral hingepoints emerged in simulations with low mesoderm expansion and zippering. We propose that zippering provides the biomechanical force for dorsolateral hingepoint formation in settings where the neural plate lateral sides extend above the mesoderm. Together, these results provide a new perspective on the biomechanical and molecular mechanism of mammalian spinal neurulation. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000526486Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
bioRxivPublisher
Cold Spring Harbor LaboratoryOrganisational unit
03791 - Iber, Dagmar / Iber, Dagmar
Funding
170930 - A 3D Cell-Based Simulation Framework for Morphogenetic Problems (SNF)
Related publications and datasets
Is previous version of: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000547416
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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