Peer review process
Not revised: This Reviewed Preprint includes the authors’ original preprint (without revision), an eLife assessment, public reviews, and a provisional response from the authors.
Read more about eLife’s peer review process.Editors
- Reviewing EditorPierre SensInstitut Curie, CNRS UMR168, Paris, France
- Senior EditorAleksandra WalczakCNRS, Paris, France
Reviewer #1 (Public review):
Summary:
The manuscript by Kostanjevec et al. investigates the mechanism behind spiral pattern formation in the cornea. The authors demonstrate that the spiral motion pattern on the mammalian corneal surface emerges from the interaction between the limbus position, cell division, extrusion, and collective cell migration. Using LacZ mosaic murine corneas, they reveal a tightening spiral flow pattern and show that their cell-based, in silico model accurately reproduces these patterns without global guidance cues. Additionally, they present a continuum model that extends the XYZ hypothesis to describe cell flux on the cornea, offering a quantitative explanation for tissue-scale processes on curved surfaces.
Strengths:
The manuscript is well-written, with a systematic approach that clearly explains experimental setups, model construction, assumptions, parameter selection, and predictions. The discussion also provides insightful perspectives on the broader implications of the results for both physics and biology.
Weaknesses:
The central premise of the manuscript, that the spiral patterning of epithelial corneal cells occurs without guidance cues, is not fully supported. The authors overlook the potential role of axons in guiding epithelial cells, despite clear evidence of spiral axon patterns in their own Fig. 1b. Previous literature indicates that axon patterning precedes epithelial cell patterning, suggesting that epithelial migration might be influenced by pre-existing neural structures (e.g., Leiper et al. 2002, IOVS 2013). The authors need to address this point, possibly by exploring whether axonal patterns serve as a template for epithelial cell migration, or by providing experimental evidence to rule out axon-based guidance.
While the model is well-constructed, it currently falls short of its stated goal of elucidating the mechanisms of spiral formation. Key questions remain unanswered:
Is the curvature of the cornea necessary for spiral formation, or would a simpler disk geometry suffice?
What role do boundary conditions play?
How well do the model's predictions quantitatively match experimental data?
The current comparisons in Fig. 4c-f lack quantitative agreement, and this discrepancy should be discussed with possible explanations.
The authors emphasize polar alignment as a key feature of the spiral pattern based on simulation results. However, they do not provide experimental evidence for this polar alignment. The manuscript includes discussions of polar and nematic symmetries that, without supporting data, feel somewhat distracting. If direct experimental evidence for polar alignment is not available, the authors could instead quantify nematic alignment as the spiral forms. This would also allow them to explore potential crosstalk between nematic cell orientation and the polar alignment of self-propulsion, especially considering recent studies showing alternative mechanisms for vortex formation in similar systems.
Reviewer #2 (Public review):
In K. Kostanjevec et.al, the authors study a possible mechanism for the formation of spiral patterns in the cornea. First the authors analyze an inferred velocity field, which is deduced from images of fixed corneas, and then determine the position-dependent spiral angle of this velocity fields. Next, the authors analysed two possible markers of cell polarity: the direction of the centrosome-nuclei and the axis of mitosis. Then the authors introduce a stochastic agent-based model of self-propelled particles with over-damped dynamics and with aligning interactions to the orientation of the nearest neighbors and to the particle's velocity. The authors claim to be able to reproduce the equal-time autocorrelation function and the velocity Fourier spectrum. Then the authors introduce the geometry of the cornea by constraining the dynamics on a spherical cap and show that their model can reproduce a typical trajectory in experiments. Finally, the authors produce a phase diagram of the states at a fixed time point as a function of the spherical cap radius and the strength of the coupling aligning constant. Finally, the authors propose an interpretation of the cell fluxes based on the equation of mass conservation.