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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Munro, Edwin M.
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overview We study how embryos integrate biochemical signaling, cytoskeletal dynamics and cell mechanics to orchestrate complex cell and tissue behaviors. We combine live imaging, genetic perturbations, biophysical analysis, and computer simulations to address questions in three main areas: Dynamic control of self-organized actomyosin contractility, cell polarization in C. elegans, and tissue morphogenesis in aascidians The forces that shape embryonic cells and tissues are produced by dynamic contractile networks of actin filaments, myosin motors and cross-linking proteins. The big challenge is to understand how embryonic cells remodel these networks by tuning network assembly, architecture and motor activity to do a sequence of different jobs – to polarize, move, change shape and divide. To address this challenge, we combine in vivo studies in C. elegans with computer simulations, focusing on three specific examples: the long range flows that polarize cells, self assembly of the contractile ring during cytokinesis, and dynamic control of pulsatile contractions that coordinate cell shape change and rearrangements during morphogenesis. We also use C. elegans embryos as a model system to explore how cells form and stabilize polarity in response to transient polarizing cues. In recent years, we (and others) have uncovered a network of biochemical and mechanical interactions involving conserved PAR polarity proteins, small Rho family GTPases, and the acvtomyosin cytoskeleton, that do this job. We combine single molecule imaging, genetic manipulations and biophysical analysis to characterize key elements of this “mechanochemical circuit”, and to probe the fundamental design principles that allow this circuit to do it's job in such an extraordinarily robust way. Finally, we use ascidians (“sea squirts”) as a simple model system to study how embryos organize force production in space and time to shape tissues and organs. Ascidians make the many of the same structures that we do - e.g. a notochord, a simple gut and a neural tube, but they do so with very few (tens of) cells, in small optically clear embryos, that are highly accessible to genetic, pharmacological and physical manipulations. We currently focus on neural tube closure. Combining experiments with computer simulations, we ask how embryos use tissue-specific gene expression and conserved pathways for planar and apico-basal polarity to pattern actomyosin contractility in space and time to shape and close the neural tube.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Munro, Edwin M.
Item TypeName
Concept Computer Simulation
Concept Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Concept Neural Crest
Concept Gene Regulatory Networks
Concept Neural Tube
Academic Article Robustness, flexibility, and the role of lateral inhibition in the neurogenic network.
Academic Article Quantitative variation in autocrine signaling and pathway crosstalk in the Caenorhabditis vulval network.
Academic Article The microtubules dance and the spindle poles swing.
Academic Article Sequential contraction and exchange of apical junctions drives zippering and neural tube closure in a simple chordate.
Academic Article Dynamic Opposition of Clustered Proteins Stabilizes Cortical Polarity in the C. elegans Zygote.
Academic Article Filament turnover tunes both force generation and dissipation to control long-range flows in a model actomyosin cortex.
Academic Article Determinants of fluidlike behavior and effective viscosity in cross-linked actin networks.
Academic Article Pushing the frontiers of development.
Academic Article Clustering of low-valence particles: structure and kinetics.
Academic Article Ingeneue: a versatile tool for reconstituting genetic networks, with examples from the segment polarity network.
Academic Article The segment polarity network is a robust developmental module.
Academic Article Differential Expression of a Classic Cadherin Directs Tissue-Level Contractile Asymmetry during Neural Tube Closure.
Academic Article Mechanosensitive Junction Remodeling Promotes Robust Epithelial Morphogenesis.
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  • Computer