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

Variation inside and out: cell types in fruit fly metamorphosis

Researchers from Japan find that different cell types and variation within these cells promote muscle breakdown and rearrangement during Drosophila development

2025-08-28
(Press-News.org) Osaka, Japan – All living beings, big or small, are formed through the hard work of many different cells. To keep the body ready for any challenge, cells need to be dynamic. Often, this means the same types of cell – for example, red blood cells – look and function differently to one another to work together en masse. While researchers know that these varied, or micro-heterogenous, cells exist in multiple bodily systems, the benefits of being heterogenous for how systems function are not yet known.

However, in a study due to be published in PLOS Computational Biology, researchers from The University of Osaka, The University of Tokyo, Tohoku University, and Future University Hakodate have revealed that teamwork makes the dream work, even at the cellular level. The findings revealed several different types of cells work together to make big changes in the bodies of a common model organism used for research, the fruit fly.

Fruit flies undergo dramatic changes in their body structure throughout their lifespan, from larvae to adults. During the critical pupal stage, cells collaborate to break down larval muscles and scatter the fragments all over the tissue.

“The two major players in muscle breakdown are sarcolytes, which are muscle fragments, and hemocytes, which are immune cells that engulf these fragments,” says senior author, Dr. Daiki Umetsu at The University of Osaka. “However, it was unclear how interactions between these different cell types, as well as variation within each cell type, affected muscle remodeling during fruit fly development.”

To address this, the researchers used a sophisticated real-time microscopy approach to track the movement of heterogenous cells in pupal fruit fly muscles. Meanwhile, a computational model of sarcolytes, hemocytes, and a third type, fat body cells, evaluated factors affecting muscle remodeling. Combining both the biological and computational methods provided researchers with the opportunity to visualize this process.

“The results were very intriguing,” explains Umetsu. “We found that sarcolytes initially moved quickly, then slowed down and adopted a more ordered arrangement, while the fat body cells appeared to help provide structure and spacing to the sarcolyte arrangement.”

Interestingly, hemocytes, which carry sarcolytes, varied considerably in their speed of movement and the number of turns made. The computer model showed that the presence of all three cell types was essential for correct sarcolyte rearrangement, and that a combination of hemocytes that meandered and those that moved in a straight line reinforced the stability of the new arrangement.

“Our findings suggest that heterogeneity both within and among cell types is crucial for achieving two different purposes in fruit fly muscle development: rapid redistribution of sarcolytes and precise placement of these cells into a new structural order,” says lead author, Dr. Daiki Wakita at The University of Tokyo.

The benefits of being able to visualize multiple different cell types and their behavior during muscle breakdown in fruit fly pupae can link to non-living beings, too. The findings generated could potentially be applied to robotics. “The research’s conclusion suggests that heterogeneous robot swarms could be more efficient at multitasking, which is more representative of real-world tasks, than groups of robots with identical features,” says senior author, Dr. Takeshi Kano at Future University Hakodate.

###

The article, “Dual-purpose dynamics emerge from a heterogeneous cell

population in Drosophila metamorphosis,” will be published in PLOS Computational Biology at DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1013331

About The University of Osaka

The University of Osaka was founded in 1931 as one of the seven imperial universities of Japan and is now one of Japan's leading comprehensive universities with a broad disciplinary spectrum. This strength is coupled with a singular drive for innovation that extends throughout the scientific process, from fundamental research to the creation of applied technology with positive economic impacts. Its commitment to innovation has been recognized in Japan and around the world. Now, The University of Osaka is leveraging its role as a Designated National University Corporation selected by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology to contribute to innovation for human welfare, sustainable development of society, and social transformation.

Website: https://resou.osaka-u.ac.jp/en

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mount Sinai researchers use AI and lab tests to predict genetic disease risk

2025-08-28
New York, NY [August 28, 2025]—When genetic testing reveals a rare DNA mutation, doctors and patients are frequently left in the dark about what it actually means. Now, researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have developed a powerful new way to determine whether a patient with a mutation is likely to actually develop disease, a concept known in genetics as penetrance. The team set out to solve this problem using artificial intelligence (AI) and routine lab tests like cholesterol, blood counts, and kidney function. Details of the findings were reported ...

When bison are room to roam, they reawaken the Yellowstone ecosystem

2025-08-28
On Aug. 28, scientists from Washington and Lee University, the National Park Service and the University of Wyoming published research in Science magazine shedding new light on the value of bison recovery efforts in Yellowstone National Park. Bill Hamilton, John T. Perry Jr. Professor in Research Science at Washington and Lee University, and Chris Geremia, a researcher with the National Park Service at Yellowstone, served as co-first authors, with co-author Jerod Merkle, associate professor and Knobloch Professor in Migration Ecology and Conservation at the University of Wyoming. While momentum is building to restore bison ...

Mars’s interior more like Rocky Road than Millionaire’s Shortbread, scientists find

2025-08-28
Mars’s interior more like Rocky Road than Millionaire’s Shortbread, scientists find New research published in the journal Science reveals the Red Planet’s mantle preserves a record of its violent beginnings. The inside of Mars isn’t smooth and uniform like familiar textbook illustrations. Instead, new research reveals it’s chunky - more like a Rocky Road brownie than a neat slice of Millionaire’s Shortbread. We often picture rocky planets like Earth and Mars as having smooth, layered interiors - with crust, mantle, and core stacked like the biscuit base, caramel middle, and chocolate topping of a millionaire’s shortbread. But the ...

Tijuana River’s toxic water pollutes the air

2025-08-28
For decades, the Tijuana River has carried millions of gallons of untreated sewage and industrial waste across the U.S.-Mexico border. The river passes through San Diego’s South Bay region before emptying into the ocean, recently leading to more than 1,300 consecutive days of beach closures and water quality concerns. Residents of South Bay communities have long voiced concerns about the foul smells emanating from the river, reporting health issues including eye, nose and throat irritation, respiratory issues, fatigue ...

Penn engineers send quantum signals with standard internet protocol

2025-08-28
In a first-of-its-kind experiment, engineers at the University of Pennsylvania brought quantum networking out of the lab and onto commercial fiber-optic cables using the same Internet Protocol (IP) that powers today’s web. Reported in Science, the work shows that fragile quantum signals can run on the same infrastructure that carries everyday online traffic. The team tested their approach on Verizon’s campus fiber-optic network. The Penn team’s tiny “Q-chip” coordinates quantum and classical data ...

Placebo pain relief works differently across human body, study finds

2025-08-28
New research finds the human brain has a built-in pain map that activates in different areas when relieving face, arm or leg pain. But placebo pain relief only works where the brain expects it. Further research may help to unlock safer, targeted pain treatments.   Researchers from the University of Sydney have used placebo pain relief to uncover a map-like system in the brainstem that controls pain differently depending on where it’s felt in the body. The findings may pave the way for safer, more targeted treatments for chronic pain that don’t rely on opioids.    Like a highway, the brainstem connects the brain to the spinal cord and manages all signals ...

New method could monitor corrosion and cracking in a nuclear reactor

2025-08-28
MIT researchers have developed a technique that enables real-time, 3D monitoring of corrosion, cracking, and other material failure processes inside a nuclear reactor environment.  This could allow engineers and scientists to design safer nuclear reactors that also deliver higher performance for applications like electricity generation and naval vessel propulsion.  During their experiments, the researchers utilized extremely powerful X-rays to mimic the behavior of neutrons interacting with a material inside a nuclear reactor.  They found that adding a buffer layer of silicon dioxide between the material and ...

Pennington Biomedical researchers find metabolic health of pregnant women may matter more than weight gain

2025-08-28
BATON ROUGE, La – Metabolic health before and during pregnancy may have a bigger influence on risks for mother and baby than simply controlling weight gain. Data from a recent paper by Pennington Biomedical researchers indicates that pregnant women with metabolically unhealthy obesity were more likely to develop gestational diabetes than those who were metabolically healthy. The paper, “Metabolic Health and Heterogenous Outcomes of Prenatal Interventions: A Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial,” was published in the Journal of American ...

World’s first custom anterior cervical spine surgery

2025-08-28
UC San Diego Health is the first health system in the world to perform an anterior cervical spine surgery using a fully personalized implant designed for a patient’s unique anatomy.  The first surgery, performed in July 2025, was an anterior cervical procedure, which involves making an incision in the front (anterior) of the neck, removing a damaged disc, and fusing the adjacent vertebrae together.  The procedure includes a standard artificial disc, placed in the space where a damaged disc has been removed. Traditional implants are one-size-fits-all, which ...

Quantum Research Sciences developing AI platform to help Air Force more efficiently connect with industry

2025-08-28
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Quantum Research Sciences (QRS), a leading Indiana-based software  company, has been awarded a U.S. Air Force contract to develop an artificial intelligence-driven platform called ACID-R, or Automated Commercial Industry Data-Repository. The platform is designed to help the Air Force efficiently identify and leverage needed technologies from the private sector. It harnesses AI without the risk of hallucination, or AI-fabricated false information, to quickly deliver details on commercial, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Addictive digital habits in early adolescence linked to mental health struggles, study finds

As tropical fish move north, UT San Antonio researcher tracks climate threats to Texas waterways

Rich medieval Danes bought graves ‘closer to God’ despite leprosy stigma, archaeologists find

Brexpiprazole as an adjunct therapy for cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia

Applications of endovascular brain–computer interface in patients with Alzheimer's disease

Path Planning Transformers supervised by IRRT*-RRMS for multi-mobile robots

Nurses can deliver hospital care just as well as doctors

From surface to depth: 3D imaging traces vascular amyloid spread in the human brain

Breathing tube insertion before hospital admission for major trauma saves lives

Unseen planet or brown dwarf may have hidden 'rare' fading star

Study: Discontinuing antidepressants in pregnancy nearly doubles risk of mental health emergencies

Bipartisan members of congress relaunch Congressional Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) Caucus with event that brings together lawmakers, medical experts, and patient advocates to address critical gap i

Antibody-drug conjugate achieves high response rates as frontline treatment in aggressive, rare blood cancer

Retina-inspired cascaded van der Waals heterostructures for photoelectric-ion neuromorphic computing

Seashells and coconut char: A coastal recipe for super-compost

Feeding biochar to cattle may help lock carbon in soil and cut agricultural emissions

Researchers identify best strategies to cut air pollution and improve fertilizer quality during composting

International research team solves mystery behind rare clotting after adenoviral vaccines or natural adenovirus infection

The most common causes of maternal death may surprise you

A new roadmap spotlights aging as key to advancing research in Parkinson’s disease

Research alert: Airborne toxins trigger a unique form of chronic sinus disease in veterans

University of Houston professor elected to National Academy of Engineering

UVM develops new framework to transform national flood prediction

Study pairs key air pollutants with home addresses to track progression of lost mobility through disability

Keeping your mind active throughout life associated with lower Alzheimer’s risk

TBI of any severity associated with greater chance of work disability

Seabird poop could have been used to fertilize Peru's Chincha Valley by at least 1250 CE, potentially facilitating the expansion of its pre-Inca society

Resilience profiles during adversity predict psychological outcomes

AI and brain control: A new system identifies animal behavior and instantly shuts down the neurons responsible

Suicide hotline calls increase with rising nighttime temperatures

[Press-News.org] Variation inside and out: cell types in fruit fly metamorphosis
Researchers from Japan find that different cell types and variation within these cells promote muscle breakdown and rearrangement during Drosophila development