Light sheet imaging, segmentation, and tracking [7] provides a global picture of the cell level contributions to tissue flow (“tissue tectonics” [16]) during Drosophila gastrulation.
A Segmented and tracked cells on the ellipsoidal surface of the early Drosophila embryo in 3D (top) and projected into the plane (bottom) using a cartographic projection [8]; imaging, segmentation and tracking data from Ref. [7]. Trunk cells are colored in bands along the DV axis to illustrate the major tissue deformations during early development of Drosophila: ventral furrow invagination (VFI, 25 min) and germ band extension (GBE, 45 min). The purple to green regions constitute the lateral ectoderm (germ band) which contracts along the DV axis and extends along the AP axis. The posterior part of the germ band moves over the pole as it extends. The red and orange regions constitute the amnioserosa, which contracts along the AP axis and extends along the DV axis. Cells that are internalized in folds are shaded in dark gray (CF: Cephalic furrow; DF: Dorsal folds; VF: Ventral furrow; PMG: posterior midgut). Only one side of the left-right symmetric embryo is shown but both sides were analyzed throughout the manuscript. B Tissue deformation is the sum of cell shape changes (top) and cell rearrangements (bottom). The elementary cell rearrangement is a T1 transition in a quartet of cells. The interface between the red cells collapses, giving rise to a transient four-fold vertex configuration (center). The four-fold vertex then resolves to form a new interface between the blue cells. C Colored, tracked cells illustrate the cell rearrangements and shape changes in the amnioserosa (top) and lateral ectoderm (bottom). While amnioserosa cells show large deformations and little coordination in their rearrangement, cell intercalations in the lateral ectoderm appear highly choreographed. (ROI size 40 × 40 µm2.) D Convergence and extension of the lateral ectoderm (x-fold change defined relative to the minimum length and maximum width respectively). During VFI, the lateral ectoderm is stretched along DV axis and slightly contracts along the AP axis. GBE has an initial fast phase before slowing down at around 40 min. E and E’ Rate of interface collapses serves as a measure for the cell intercalation rate. During VFI, the are few intercalations. During GBE, the majority of intercalations are T1 transitions, while rosettes, rearrangements involving more than four cells, contribute significantly less to tissue deformation (E’). At 40 min, there is a noticeable drop in the T1 rate, marking the transition to the slow phase of GBE. Intercalation events before t = 12 min where excluded from the subsequent analysis.