Cellular sociology regulates the hierarchical spatial patterning and organization of cells in organisms

Open Biol. 2020 Dec;10(12):200300. doi: 10.1098/rsob.200300. Epub 2020 Dec 16.

Abstract

Advances in single-cell biotechnology have increasingly revealed interactions of cells with their surroundings, suggesting a cellular society at the microscale. Similarities between cells and humans across multiple hierarchical levels have quantitative inference potential for reaching insights about phenotypic interactions that lead to morphological forms across multiple scales of cellular organization, namely cells, tissues and organs. Here, the functional and structural comparisons between how cells and individuals fundamentally socialize to give rise to the spatial organization are investigated. Integrative experimental cell interaction assays and computational predictive methods shape the understanding of societal perspective in the determination of the cellular interactions that create spatially coordinated forms in biological systems. Emerging quantifiable models from a simpler biological microworld such as bacterial interactions and single-cell organisms are explored, providing a route to model spatio-temporal patterning of morphological structures in humans. This analogical reasoning framework sheds light on structural patterning principles as a result of biological interactions across the cellular scale and up.

Keywords: cell-to-cell interactions; multiplex bioimaging; quantitative biology; sociology of cells; spatial patterning.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cell Biology*
  • Cell Communication*
  • Cell Physiological Phenomena*
  • Cellular Microenvironment*
  • Histology*
  • Humans
  • Models, Biological*
  • Organ Specificity