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This dissertation features a compilation of studies concerning the biophysics of multicellular systems. I explore eukaryotic systems across length scales of the cell cytoskeleton to macroscopic scales of tissues. I begin with a general overview of the natural phenomena of

This dissertation features a compilation of studies concerning the biophysics of multicellular systems. I explore eukaryotic systems across length scales of the cell cytoskeleton to macroscopic scales of tissues. I begin with a general overview of the natural phenomena of life and a philosophy of investigating developmental systems in biology. The topics covered throughout this dissertation require a background in eukaryotic cell physiology, viscoelasticity, and processes of embryonic tissue morphogenesis. Following a brief background on these topics, I present an overview of the Subcellular Element Model (ScEM). This is a modeling framework which allows one to compute the dynamics of large numbers of three-dimensional deformable cells in multi-cellular systems. A primary focus of the work presented here is implementing cellular function within the framework of this model to produce biologically meaningful phenotypes. In this way, it is hoped that this modeling may inform biological understanding of the underlying mechanisms which manifest into a given cell or tissue scale phenomenon. Thus, all theoretical investigations presented here are motivated by and compared to experimental observations. With the ScEM modeling framework I first explore the passive properties of viscoelastic networks. Then as a direct extension of this work, I consider the active properties of cells, which result in biological behavior and the emergence of non-trivial biological phenotypes in cells and tissues. I then explore the possible role of chemotaxis as a mechanism of orchestrating large scale tissue morphogenesis in the early embryonic stages of amniotes. Finally I discuss the cross-sectional topology of proliferating epithelial tissues. I show how the Subcellular Element Model (ScEM) is a phenomenological model of finite elements whose interactions can be calibrated to describe the viscoelastic properties of biological materials. I further show that implementing mechanisms of cytoskeletal remodeling yields cellular and tissue phenotypes that are more and more biologically realistic. Particularly I show that structural remodeling of the cell cytoskeleton is crucial for large scale cell deformations. I provide supporting evidence that a chemotactic dipole mechanism is able to orchestrate the type of large scale collective cell movement observed in the chick epiblast during gastrulation and primitive streak formation. Finally, I show that cell neighbor histograms provide a potentially unique signature measurement of tissue topology; such measurements may find use in identifying cellular level phenotypes from a single snapshot micrograph.
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    Title
    • Emergence of biological phenotypes with subcellular based modeling: from cells to tissues
    Contributors
    Date Created
    2011
    Resource Type
  • Text
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    • thesis
      Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2011
    • bibliography
      Includes bibliographical references (p. 113-118)
    • Field of study: Physics

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    by Sebastian Ambrose Sandersius

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