Instability and fingering of interfaces in growing tissue

10 Mar 2020  ·  Tobias Büscher, Angel L. Diez, Gerhard Gompper, Jens Elgeti ·

Interfaces in tissues are ubiquitous, both between tissue and environment as well as between populations of different cell types. The propagation of an interface can be driven mechanically. % e.g. by a difference in the respective homeostatic stress of the different cell types. Computer simulations of growing tissues are employed to study the stability of the interface between two tissues on a substrate. From a mechanical perspective, the dynamics and stability of this system is controlled mainly by four parameters of the respective tissues: (i) the homeostatic stress (ii) cell motility (iii) tissue viscosity and (iv) substrate friction. For propagation driven by a difference in homeostatic stress, the interface is stable for tissue-specific substrate friction even for very large differences of homeostatic stress; however, it becomes unstable above a critical stress difference when the tissue with the larger homeostatic stress has a higher viscosity. A small difference in directed bulk motility between the two tissues suffices to result in propagation with a stable interface, even for otherwise identical tissues. Larger differences in motility force, however, result in a finite-wavelength instability of the interface. Interestingly, the instability is apparently bound by nonlinear effects and the amplitude of the interface undulations only grows to a finite value in time.

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