The vertebrate body forms by the addition of new tissues at the posterior end. This elongates the body axis, allowing continued anterior segmentation to produce the stereotypic body plan. This balance requires the elongation speed to be constrained. Here we utilized modeling and tissue force microscopy on chicken embryos to show that cell density of the posterior presomitic mesoderm (pPSM) dynamically modulates elongation speed in a negative feedback loop. Elongation alters the cell density in the pPSM, which in turn controls progenitor cell influx through the mechanical coupling of body axis tissues. This enables responsive cell dynamics in over- and under-elongated axes that consequently self-adjust speed to achieve long-term robustness in axial length. Our simulations and experiments further suggest that cell density and FGF activity synergistically drive elongation. Our work supports a simple mechanism of morphogenetic speed control where the cell density relates negatively to progress, and positively to force generation.
Keywords: Biophysics; Cell biology; Developmental biology.
© 2024 The Author(s).