PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Tissue origami: Using light to study and control tissue folding

New tools reveal secrets about how cells create complex shapes in embryos.

2025-08-20
(Press-News.org) The complex 3D shapes of brains, lungs, eyes, hands, and other vital bodily structures emerge from the way in which flat 2D sheets of cells fold during embryonic development. Now, researchers at Columbia Engineering have developed a novel way to use light to influence an animal's own proteins in order to control folding in live embryos.

These new findings, detailed Aug. 18 in Nature Communications, may one day lead to a host of applications in biorobotics and medical research.

"Being able to precisely control the shape of folds in tissue sheets is a foundational step toward 'tissue origami,' which can be used to study 3D tissue biology outside developing embryos, or for building and controlling the motion of tiny machines or robots made out of living biological cells," said Karen Kasza, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Columbia Engineering and the study's senior author.

From flat sheets to complex structures One major way that developing embryos build their organs is through furrowing — that is, they form pockets in tissues, which eventually become the sites of folds. "Just as a flat sheet of paper can be folded into a crane, a flat embryonic tissue can be folded into the precursor of an organ," said Andrew Countryman, a doctoral student in biomedical engineering at Columbia and the study's first author.

Previous research has developed many tools for manipulating the proteins and other molecules that direct how cells behave. However, scientists lacked similar techniques for systematically controlling the mechanical forces that ultimately shape embryos. 

In the new study, Kasza, Countryman, and their colleagues experimented with the fruit fly, a common lab animal. "As developmental processes and machinery are highly conserved across animals, these findings in fruit flies provide insight into development in all animals, including humans," Countryman said.

Light-sensitive tools built with CRISPR The researchers tinkered with proteins that cells use to generate mechanical forces, making these molecules responsive to light. By shining patterns of specific wavelengths of light on fruit fly embryos genetically modified to produce these proteins, they could in turn control patterns of forces during their development. 

The new study used the gene-editing system CRISPR-Cas9 to add a light-sensitive module to genes that naturally exist in fruit flies. The resulting molecules are the first tools that let scientists use light to control an animal's own genes to direct mechanical forces in live embryos. They are also the first tools that enable scientists to employ light to control cell-generated forces in a tunable way, instead of just switching such forces on and off, Countryman said.

The researchers specifically modified proteins that help cells contract, one method by which tissues can generate furrows. The resulting tools, called endogenous OptoRhoGEFs, helped the scientists discover that the depth of a furrow depends on the amount of these contraction-linked proteins that get summoned to a cell's membrane. They also found that stiff layers of proteins within embryos could dramatically influence the ways in which tissues furrowed.

Implications for human health "Similarly to fly embryos, human embryos extensively employ furrowing processes during development," Countryman said. "A failure of tissues to furrow properly is associated with common and devastating congenital disorders, such as spina bifida. Improved understanding of developmental processes will help identify and treat these conditions."

This new technique may one day help scientists better analyze tissue and organ development and disease, using light to fold basic sheets of cells into complex 3D structures in the lab instead of the more complex environments inside living animals, Countryman said.

In addition, "small, controllable, cell-based machines have promising use in medical contexts, where they can serve as biocompatible probes during medical procedures," he added. "They could also be used as small, aqueous, remotely pilotable vehicles to explore and survey new environments."

In the future, the researchers hope to use their new strategy to examine other ways in which tissues furrow, as well as tissue behaviors other than furrowing, such as bending, stretching, and flowing. "These basic modes of tissue deformation are used in different combinations and sequences to build a wide variety of tissues, organs, and body forms," Countryman said.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

‘Cyborg jellyfish’ could aid in deep-sea research, inspire next-gen underwater vehicles

2025-08-20
In a towering aquarium in a darkened laboratory, moon jellyfish (Aurelia aurita) hover as if floating in space. The glow of neon lights illuminates their translucent, bell-shaped bodies as they expand and contract rhythmically, their graceful tentacles flowing in wavelike patterns. CU Boulder engineer Nicole Xu watches them with fondness. Xu, an assistant professor in the Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering, first became fascinated with moon jellies more than a decade ago because of their ...

2022 Pacific volcano eruption made a deep dive into Alaska

2025-08-20
Atmospheric waves from a massive 2022 South Pacific volcanic eruption created seismic waves that penetrated Earth to at least 5 kilometers in Alaska, creating an opportunity to employ an unusual method of peering into the state’s deep subsurface. Ken Macpherson, a scientist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute, and other researchers analyzed the coupling of atmospheric pressure waves with the ground to determine the speed at which seismic waves travel through Alaska’s upper crust.  Subsurface material properties such as hardness, which controls seismic velocity, can ...

International collaboration on nursing and midwifery in the Caribbean deemed a success, according to new study

2025-08-20
PHILADELPHIA (August 20, 2025) – A new publication highlights the success of an international partnership working to strengthen nursing and midwifery in the Caribbean. “Fostering International Collaborations to Inform Nursing and Midwifery Policy: A Caribbean Initiative,” appears in the International Nursing Review. It was led by Penn Nursing’s Eileen T. Lake, PhD, RN, FAAN, the Edith Clemmer Steinbright Professor in Gerontology, with Carmen Alvarez, PhD, CRNP, CNM, FAAN, Associate Professor of Nursing, serving as co-author. The initiative was created to support ...

AABB updates transfusion standards after another massive Carson study

2025-08-20
Jeffrey Carson spent more than a decade persuading hospitals that fewer, resource-saving blood transfusions work just as well as more frequent transfusions for most patients. More recently, the Rutgers internist finished a massive study that indicates a major exception to the rule: anemic heart attack patients. That work, published in late 2023 in the New England Journal of Medicine and reinforced by a combined analysis of patients from several studies this past winter, underpins a just-published recommendation from the Association for the Advancement of ...

UCF researcher helps confirm genetic restoration success for Florida panthers

2025-08-20
In 1995, scientists translocated eight Texas pumas into Florida in a genetic restoration effort to save the only viable puma population east of the Mississippi from extinction, the Florida panther. The move raised concerns about harmful mutations and genetic swamping — or loss of unique traits. However, a recent study co-authored by UCF Assistant Professor of Biology and Genomics and Bioinformatics faculty cluster member Robert Fitak, found that since the introduction, genetic variation has significantly improved; unique traits have been retained; and harmful mutations, while still present, are largely masked by the restored ...

High-salt diet inflames the brain and raises blood pressure, study finds

2025-08-20
A new study finds that a high-salt diet triggers brain inflammation that drives up blood pressure. The research, led by McGill University scientist Masha Prager-Khoutorsky in collaboration with an interdisciplinary team at McGill and the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre, suggests the brain may be a missing link in certain forms of high blood pressure – or hypertension – traditionally attributed to the kidneys. “This is new evidence that high ...

Updated lab guide equips researchers with modern tools to identify plant pathogens

2025-08-20
A trusted and essential resource for more than four decades, Laboratory Guide for Identification of Plant Pathogenic Bacteria returns in a fully updated fourth edition. This guide remains the most authoritative reference for plant pathologists, diagnosticians, and students who need to accurately identify bacterial plant pathogens using both conventional and cutting-edge methods. Each chapter is authored by leading experts and provides a holistic, comprehensive overview of the genus or genera, including characteristics useful for identification, isolation techniques, and molecular, ...

Inflammation and aging: Looking through an evolutionary lens

2025-08-20
It’s been a long-accepted reality that with age comes increased inflammation – so widely accepted it’s been dubbed “inflammaging.” With this increase in age-related chronic inflammation also comes serious health concerns, such as cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer’s. But according to new research, inflammaging isn’t as universal of an experience as previously thought. Published today in Proceedings of Royal Society B, “Inflammaging is minimal among forager-horticulturalists in the Bolivian Amazon,” the work highlights little inflammaging in one non-industrialized ...

With human feedback, AI-driven robots learn tasks better and faster

2025-08-20
At UC Berkeley, researchers in Sergey Levine’s Robotic AI and Learning Lab eyed a table where a tower of 39 Jenga blocks stood perfectly stacked. Then a white-and-black robot, its single limb doubled over like a hunched-over giraffe, zoomed toward the tower, brandishing a black leather whip. Through what might have seemed to a casual viewer like a miracle of physics, the whip struck in precisely the right spot to send a single block flying out from the stack while the rest of the tower remained structurally sound. This task, known as ...

Urban civilization rose in Southern Mesopotamia on the back of tides

2025-08-20
Woods Hole, Mass. (August 20, 2025) -- A newly published study challenges long-held assumptions about the origins of urban civilization in ancient Mesopotamia, suggesting that the rise of Sumer was driven by the dynamic interplay of rivers, tides, and sediments at the head of the Persian Gulf. Published today in PLOS ONE, the study, Morphodynamic Foundations of Sumer, is led by Liviu Giosan, Senior Scientist Emeritus in Geology & Geophysics at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), and Reed Goodman, Assistant Professor of Environmental Social Science at Baruch Institute of Social Ecology and Forest Science (BICEFS), Clemson ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Nostalgia is an asset in company acquisitions

Individuals should be held to account for environmental damage, say experts

Menopause misinformation is harming care, warn experts

Companies may be misleading parents with “outrageous claims” about banking baby teeth

Ozone will warm planet more than first thought

Tissue origami: Using light to study and control tissue folding

‘Cyborg jellyfish’ could aid in deep-sea research, inspire next-gen underwater vehicles

2022 Pacific volcano eruption made a deep dive into Alaska

International collaboration on nursing and midwifery in the Caribbean deemed a success, according to new study

AABB updates transfusion standards after another massive Carson study

UCF researcher helps confirm genetic restoration success for Florida panthers

High-salt diet inflames the brain and raises blood pressure, study finds

Updated lab guide equips researchers with modern tools to identify plant pathogens

Inflammation and aging: Looking through an evolutionary lens

With human feedback, AI-driven robots learn tasks better and faster

Urban civilization rose in Southern Mesopotamia on the back of tides

Parkinson’s disease risk increases with metabolic syndrome

What happened before the Big Bang?

First SwRI-owned office outside Texas opens in Warner Robins, Georgia

Ad hominem attacks are the most common way users confront content they perceive as wrong in comment sections beneath news videos, with over 40% of analyzed comments relying on reputation-based insults

California's dwarf Channel Island foxes mostly have relatively bigger brains than their larger mainland gray fox cousins, which may reflect island-specific evolutionary pressures

Extreme heat poses growing threat to our aging population

Researchers reverse autism symptoms in mice with epilepsy drugs

Few depressed teens getting treatment, study finds

Access to green space was a mental health lifeline during COVID-19 pandemic

New drug formulation turns intravenous treatments into a quick injection

In the Neolithic, agriculture took root gradually

Hunting wolves reduces livestock deaths measurably, but minimally, according to new study

Breakthrough discovery reveals how connection between mitochondrial vulnerability and neurovasculature function impacts neuropsychiatric disease

Feeding massive stars

[Press-News.org] Tissue origami: Using light to study and control tissue folding
New tools reveal secrets about how cells create complex shapes in embryos.