Keratins coordinate tissue spreading by balancing spreading forces with tissue material properties
Naik S, Keta Y-E, Pranjic-Ferscha K, Hannezo EB, Henkes S, Heisenberg C-PJ. Keratins coordinate tissue spreading by balancing spreading forces with tissue material properties. bioRxiv, 10.1101/2025.02.14.638262.
Download (ext.)
Preprint
| Draft
| English
Author
Naik, SuyashISTA
;
Keta, Yann-Edwin;
Pranjic-Ferscha, KornelijaISTA;
Hannezo, Edouard ISTA
;
Henkes, Silke;
Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp ISTA 
Corresponding author has ISTA affiliation
Department
Abstract
For tissues to spread, they must be deformable while maintaining their structural integrity. How these opposing requirements are balanced within spreading tissues is not yet well understood. Here, we show that keratin intermediate filaments function in epithelial spreading by adapting tissue mechanical resilience to the stresses arising in the tissue during the spreading process. By analysing the expansion of the enveloping cell layer (EVL) over the large yolk cell in early zebrafish embryos in vivo, we found that keratin network maturation in EVL cells is promoted by stresses building up within the spreading tissue. Through genetic interference and tissue rheology experiments, complemented by a vertex model with mechanochemical feedback, we demonstrate that stress-induced keratin network maturation in the EVL increases tissue viscosity, which is essential for preventing tissue rupture. Interestingly, keratins are also required in the yolk cell for mechanosensitive actomyosin network contraction and flow, the force-generating processes pulling the EVL. These dual mechanosensitive functions of keratins enable a balance between pulling force production in the yolk cell and the mechanical resilience of the EVL against stresses generated by these pulling forces, thereby ensuring uniform and robust tissue spreading.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2025-02-17
Journal Title
bioRxiv
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
IST-REx-ID
Cite this
Naik S, Keta Y-E, Pranjic-Ferscha K, Hannezo EB, Henkes S, Heisenberg C-PJ. Keratins coordinate tissue spreading by balancing spreading forces with tissue material properties. bioRxiv. doi:10.1101/2025.02.14.638262
Naik, S., Keta, Y.-E., Pranjic-Ferscha, K., Hannezo, E. B., Henkes, S., & Heisenberg, C.-P. J. (n.d.). Keratins coordinate tissue spreading by balancing spreading forces with tissue material properties. bioRxiv. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.02.14.638262
Naik, Suyash, Yann-Edwin Keta, Kornelija Pranjic-Ferscha, Edouard B Hannezo, Silke Henkes, and Carl-Philipp J Heisenberg. “Keratins Coordinate Tissue Spreading by Balancing Spreading Forces with Tissue Material Properties.” BioRxiv. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, n.d. https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.02.14.638262.
S. Naik, Y.-E. Keta, K. Pranjic-Ferscha, E. B. Hannezo, S. Henkes, and C.-P. J. Heisenberg, “Keratins coordinate tissue spreading by balancing spreading forces with tissue material properties,” bioRxiv. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
Naik S, Keta Y-E, Pranjic-Ferscha K, Hannezo EB, Henkes S, Heisenberg C-PJ. Keratins coordinate tissue spreading by balancing spreading forces with tissue material properties. bioRxiv, 10.1101/2025.02.14.638262.
Naik, Suyash, et al. “Keratins Coordinate Tissue Spreading by Balancing Spreading Forces with Tissue Material Properties.” BioRxiv, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, doi:10.1101/2025.02.14.638262.
All files available under the following license(s):
Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-ND 4.0):
Link(s) to Main File(s)
Access Level
Open Access
