Stochastic Ratchets and Cell Junction Shrinkage
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IISER Mohali
Abstract
Tissue remodelling is a process ubiquitous in nature, showing up in
processes from wound healing to early morphogenesis. During this process
of remodelling, inter-cellular
junctions must shrink to allow cell shape changes. For this thesis, we focus
on the experimentally observed germ band extension in the Drosophila
Embryo. This is known to be initiated by the active shrinkage of the vertical
junctions. Experiments have also observed that this shrinkage happens in a
ratchet-like manner. The steps of the ratchet are controlled by the density
of molecular motors (Myosin II and E-Cadherin clusters) with noisy
dynamics at the cell junction. There is a delicate interplay of the force
generating Myosin and the force sensing E-Cadherin. We attempt to model
this using a Myosin-II driven stochastic ratchet. The cell junction length is
modeled analogous to an active spring. We assume that the rest length of
the spring changes with each step, acting as the ratcheting mechanism and
preventing backlash errors in the junction length. We construct non
dimensional difference equations for the dynamics and attempt to
understand the dynamics of the junction length. We find conditions for
‘good’ and ‘bad’ ratchets in our system. We also attempt to study the
effects of offsets and lags between the cadherin and myosin dynamics on
the junction length.