The emergence of complex structural organisation in skeletal muscle

Lead Research Organisation: University of Warwick
Department Name: Warwick Medical School

Abstract

During development, an organism goes from a single fertilised cell through to an adult with multiple organs. These organs are precisely shaped and the internal cellular structure tightly defined to ensure efficient function. For example, the lungs generate a large-scale branching network to enable rapid oxygen transport into the bloodstream. In the skeletal muscle, muscle cells form elongated, and typically multinucleated, fibres that enable the generation of significant force. How complex organ shape emerges during development has been a long standing question in biology, going back to before even D'Arcy Thompson. Yet, understanding the underlying processes has long proven challenging, partially due to the difficulty of imaging the cellular processes at appropriate spatial and temporal resolution.

Recent years have seen three major advances that are helping us to tackle this challenge. First, biophysical models have proven to be very powerful in describing the structural changes in the material properties of biological materials. Developing tissues can undergo transitions, such as between fluid-like (i.e. rapid cell rearrangements) and solid-like (i.e. rigid internal structure). Second, imaging advances mean we can record with subcellular resolution the dynamics of cell morphogenesis in living embryos. Third, there have been major steps forward in our ability to segment and quantify complex biological imaging data using machine learning and more traditional approaches. Analysis of muscle fibre formation is especially challenging due to the speed with which the cell structure changes, including cell fusion. By combining these advances with the powerful genetics and optical accessibility of the zebrafish embryo, here we aim to dissect how the internal structural organisation of skeletal muscle emerges.

Through the following Aims, we explore if the developing skeletal muscle undergoes a material change in its properties and how cellular processes drive cell and tissue shaping:
1) Provide the first dissection of the dynamics for every cell within an internal vertebrate organ as they reach their final position and morphology.
2) Uncover the mechanisms happening within the cells that drive cell and nucleus reshaping and positioning.
3) Use suitable mutants to perturb the cellular environment to test our models of cell and tissue shaping.
In Aim 1, we will develop imaging and image analysis techniques to allow us to access the cellular behaviour throughout initial skeletal muscle development. We will track the position and morphology of every cell within each selected future muscle segment as they go from round cells through to the highly elongated and tightly structured muscle. The quantitative data is a key input into our analysis of the tissue structural order, to test if there are hallmarks of transitions in the material properties.

In Aim 2, we dissect some of the subcellular mechanisms driving the changes in cell and tissue shape. We focus on microtubules due to their importance in a range of cellular processes associated with muscle formation. We will utilise lattice light-sheet microscopy - which enables very fast imaging at high spatial resolution - to record the dynamics of microtubules and their associated motor proteins during skeletal muscle formation. We will combine this with suitable drug and light-tuneable perturbations to dissect the role of microtubules in guiding muscle morphogenesis.

In Aim 3, we utilise a range of mutants to further explore the mechanisms driving tissue organisation. We focus on perturbing muscle cell fate specification and inhibiting muscle fusion. These perturbations allow us to access the role of both biochemical and biomechanical inputs in driving skeletal muscle formation.

Around 40% of human body mass is skeletal muscle. Using zebrafish development. we will dissect the fundamental mechanisms ensuring this tissue is precisely structured.

Technical Summary

How does the complex internal structure of an organ form? Biophysical modelling of active systems suggests that structural phase transitions may play an important role in generating robust tissue structure. Here, I take advantage of my lab's expertise in imaging and image analysis of zebrafish embryo development to explore whether the forming skeletal muscle undergoes a structural material transition during its formation.

We will take a multi-scale approach. At the cell scale, we will track and quantify the 3D morphology of every cell within the developing muscle segment (myotome). This will provide a unique data set that will describe how the cellular organisation of the myotome emerges. We will utilise machine learning methods in conjunction with more classical approaches (e.g. adaptive watersheds) to build an image analysis pipeline that can handle the rapidly changing morphology and fusion of muscle fibres. We will then use such data in conjunction with approaches from topology to assess the material structural properties.

At the subcellular level we focus on the role of microtubules, motivated by their role in cell elongation and nucleus positioning during muscle formation - these processes appear to be important in regulating the cellular structural organisation. We will perform detailed live imaging of microtubules in conjunction with controlled drug perturbations. To explore the spatio-temporal dynamics more closely, we further plan to optimise light-activatable approaches to perturb microtubule function.

Finally, we will use mutants of cell fate and cell fusion to explore how defects at the cellular and tissue scale alter the myotome structural organisation. Zebrafish mutants are readily available, making quantitative analysis feasible. In summary, this represents an exciting opportunity to unravel how the collective behaviour of cells drives the robust formation of internal organ structure.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Title in toto maps of the developing zebrafish muscle 
Description We have completed tracking of over 450 fusion events in 10 muscle segments. This data is available to anyone who asks 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This is the first complete map of the formation of a segment of skeletal muscle from undifferentiated cells through to the generation of the first multinucleated, elongated muscle fibres. 
 
Description Topological approaches to structural ordering 
Organisation Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The laboratory of Jorn Dunkel at MIT is providing advanced tools for exploring the topological arrangement of biological tissues.
Collaborator Contribution They provide code and analyse data for us. Further, they help with interpretation of the data.
Impact The project has only just beyond, so we are yet to have any clearly defined outputs. We are working towards a paper on the topological organisation of the skeletal muscle in zebrafish.
Start Year 2022