scholarly journals Elongated cells drive morphogenesis in a surface-wrapped finite element model of germband retraction

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. T. McCleery ◽  
J. Veldhuis ◽  
G. W. Brodland ◽  
M. E. Bennett ◽  
M. S. Hutson

ABSTRACTDuring Drosophila embryogenesis, the germband first extends to curl around the posterior end of the embryo, and then retracts back; however, retraction is not simply the reversal of extension. At a tissue level, extension is coincident with ventral furrow formation, and at a cellular level, extension occurs via convergent cell neighbor exchanges in the germband while retraction involves only changes in cell shape. To understand how cell shapes, tissue organization and cellular forces drive germband retraction, we investigate this process using a whole-embryo, surface-wrapped cellular finite element model. This model represents two key epithelial tissues – amnioserosa and germband – as adjacent sheets of 2D cellular finite elements that are wrapped around an ellipsoidal 3D approximation of an embryo. The model reproduces the detailed kinematics of in vivo retraction by fitting just one free model parameter, the tension along germband cell interfaces; all other cellular forces are constrained to follow ratios inferred from experimental observations. With no additional parameter adjustments, the model also reproduces failures of retraction when amnioserosa cells are removed to mimic U-shaped mutants or laser-microsurgery experiments. Surprisingly, retraction in the model is robust to changes in cellular force values, but is critically dependent on starting from a configuration with highly elongated amnioserosa cells. Their extreme cellular elongation is established during the prior process of germband extension and is then used to drive retraction. The amnioserosa is the one tissue whose cellular morphogenesis is reversed in germband extension and retraction – serving as a store of morphological information that coordinates the forces needed to retract the germband back to its pre-extension position and shape. In this case, and perhaps more generally, cellular force strengths are less important than the carefully established cell shapes that direct them.

2006 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. S501
Author(s):  
M. Sangeux ◽  
F. Marin ◽  
F. Charleux ◽  
L. Dürselen ◽  
M.-C. Ho Ba Thoa

2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shou-sung Chang ◽  
Peter M. Pinsky

Abstract Various forms of refractive surgery for vision correction have come into clinical practice in which the corneal tissue is either incised, removed, added to, or redistributed. The outcomes of these procedures must be to a large extent determined by the intrinsic mechanical properties of the major structural layer of the cornea, the stroma1. If these mechanical properties, principally the Young’s modulus and shear modulus, are established for the human cornea, it will be possible to include them in a finite element model of the stroma that can help predict the outcome of keratorefractive procedures. In this study an opto-mechanical testing device was developed to measure the contour of a cornea deformed in situ by a mechanical probe. A nonlinear finite element model of the cornea was then constructed to simulate the experiment for use in inverse estimation of the in vivo Young’s and shear moduli of an individual eye.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason K. Otto ◽  
Thomas D. Brown ◽  
John J. Callaghan

Abstract Mobile bearing total knees avoid the conformity/constraint tradeoff of fixed bearing total knees. However, a recent in vivo fluoroscopic study of the most popular mobile bearing total knee in the U.S. showed that bearing motion failed to occur in half of the patients observed. A nonlinear, multiple-surface contact finite element model of a rotating platform total knee was therefore developed to investigate the interaction at the “mobile” interface (contact between the tibial tray and the polyethylene insert) under physiologically relevant loads (1–4 BW) and rotations (10° endorotation). The data showed that there was a linear relationship between axial load and the torque resisting endorotation. Peak contact stresses were located on the medial and lateral peripheral edges of the polyethylene insert. All relative rotation occurred at the “mobile” interface. The same trends were seen in a complementary experimental study of the same components, suggesting that the finite element model is valid under these loading conditions.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Driscoll ◽  
Jean-Marc Mac-Thiong ◽  
Hubert Labelle ◽  
Stefan Parent

A large spectrum of medical devices exists; it aims to correct deformities associated with spinal disorders. The development of a detailed volumetric finite element model of the osteoligamentous spine would serve as a valuable tool to assess, compare, and optimize spinal devices. Thus the purpose of the study was to develop and initiate validation of a detailed osteoligamentous finite element model of the spine with simulated correction from spinal instrumentation. A finite element of the spine from T1 to L5 was developed using properties and geometry from the published literature and patient data. Spinal instrumentation, consisting of segmental translation of a scoliotic spine, was emulated. Postoperative patient and relevant published data of intervertebral disc stress, screw/vertebra pullout forces, and spinal profiles was used to evaluate the models validity. Intervertebral disc and vertebral reaction stresses respected publishedin vivo,ex vivo, andin silicovalues. Screw/vertebra reaction forces agreed with accepted pullout threshold values. Cobb angle measurements of spinal deformity following simulated surgical instrumentation corroborated with patient data. This computational biomechanical analysis validated a detailed volumetric spine model. Future studies seek to exploit the model to explore the performance of corrective spinal devices.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (02) ◽  
pp. 1850020 ◽  
Author(s):  
TIEN TUAN DAO ◽  
ANG-XIAO FAN ◽  
STÉPHANIE DAKPÉ ◽  
PHILIPPE POULETAUT ◽  
MOHAMED RACHIK ◽  
...  

Facial muscle coordination is a fundamental mechanism for facial mimics and expressions. The understanding of this complex mechanism leads to better diagnosis and treatment of facial disorders like facial palsy or disfigurement. The objective of this work was to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique to characterize the activation behavior of facial muscles and then simulate their coordination mechanism using a subject specific finite element model. MRI data of lower head of a healthy subject were acquired in neutral and in the pronunciation of the sound [o] positions. Then, a finite element model was derived directly from acquired MRI images in neutral position. Transversely-isotropic, hyperelastic, quasi-incompressible behavior law was implemented for modeling facial muscles. The simulation to produce the pronunciation of the sound [o] was performed by the cumulative coordination between three pairs of facial mimic muscles (Zygomaticus Major (ZM), Levator Labii Superioris (LLS), Levator Anguli Oris (LAO)). Mean displacement amplitude showed a good agreement with a relative deviation of 15% between numerical outcome and MRI-based measurement when all three muscles are involved. This study elucidates, for the first time, the facial muscle coordination using in vivo data leading to improve the model understanding and simulation outcomes.


2000 ◽  
Vol 45 (10) ◽  
pp. 272-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Gunter ◽  
B. Merz ◽  
R. Merieske-Stern ◽  
J. Schmitt ◽  
R. Leppek ◽  
...  

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