Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Raphaël Etournay is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Raphaël Etournay.


eLife | 2015

Interplay of cell dynamics and epithelial tension during morphogenesis of the Drosophila pupal wing

Raphaël Etournay; Marko Popović; Matthias Merkel; Amitabha Nandi; Corinna Blasse; Benoît Aigouy; Holger Brandl; Gene Myers; Guillaume Salbreux; Frank Jülicher; Suzanne Eaton

How tissue shape emerges from the collective mechanical properties and behavior of individual cells is not understood. We combine experiment and theory to study this problem in the developing wing epithelium of Drosophila. At pupal stages, the wing-hinge contraction contributes to anisotropic tissue flows that reshape the wing blade. Here, we quantitatively account for this wing-blade shape change on the basis of cell divisions, cell rearrangements and cell shape changes. We show that cells both generate and respond to epithelial stresses during this process, and that the nature of this interplay specifies the pattern of junctional network remodeling that changes wing shape. We show that patterned constraints exerted on the tissue by the extracellular matrix are key to force the tissue into the right shape. We present a continuum mechanical model that quantitatively describes the relationship between epithelial stresses and cell dynamics, and how their interplay reshapes the wing. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.07090.001


Development | 2010

Cochlear outer hair cells undergo an apical circumference remodeling constrained by the hair bundle shape.

Raphaël Etournay; Léa Lepelletier; Jacques Boutet de Monvel; Vincent Michel; Nadège Cayet; Michel Leibovici; Dominique Weil; Isabelle Foucher; Jean-Pierre Hardelin; Christine Petit

Epithelial cells acquire diverse shapes relating to their different functions. This is particularly relevant for the cochlear outer hair cells (OHCs), whose apical and basolateral shapes accommodate the functioning of these cells as mechano-electrical and electromechanical transducers, respectively. We uncovered a circumferential shape transition of the apical junctional complex (AJC) of OHCs, which occurs during the early postnatal period in the mouse, prior to hearing onset. Geometric analysis of the OHC apical circumference using immunostaining of the AJC protein ZO1 and Fourier-interpolated contour detection characterizes this transition as a switch from a rounded-hexagon to a non-convex circumference delineating two lateral lobes at the neural side of the cell, with a negative curvature in between. This shape tightly correlates with the ‘V’-configuration of the OHC hair bundle, the apical mechanosensitive organelle that converts sound-evoked vibrations into variations in cell membrane potential. The OHC apical circumference remodeling failed or was incomplete in all the mouse mutants affected in hair bundle morphogenesis that we tested. During the normal shape transition, myosin VIIa and myosin II (A and B isoforms) displayed polarized redistributions into and out of the developing lobes, respectively, while Shroom2 and F-actin transiently accumulated in the lobes. Defects in these redistributions were observed in the mutants, paralleling their apical circumference abnormalities. Our results point to a pivotal role for actomyosin cytoskeleton tensions in the reshaping of the OHC apical circumference. We propose that this remodeling contributes to optimize the mechanical coupling between the basal and apical poles of mature OHCs.


eLife | 2016

TissueMiner: A multiscale analysis toolkit to quantify how cellular processes create tissue dynamics

Raphaël Etournay; Matthias Merkel; Marko Popović; Holger Brandl; Natalie A. Dye; Benoît Aigouy; Guillaume Salbreux; Suzanne Eaton; Frank Jülicher

Segmentation and tracking of cells in long-term time-lapse experiments has emerged as a powerful method to understand how tissue shape changes emerge from the complex choreography of constituent cells. However, methods to store and interrogate the large datasets produced by these experiments are not widely available. Furthermore, recently developed methods for relating tissue shape changes to cell dynamics have not yet been widely applied by biologists because of their technical complexity. We therefore developed a database format that stores cellular connectivity and geometry information of deforming epithelial tissues, and computational tools to interrogate it and perform multi-scale analysis of morphogenesis. We provide tutorials for this computational framework, called TissueMiner, and demonstrate its capabilities by comparing cell and tissue dynamics in vein and inter-vein subregions of the Drosophila pupal wing. These analyses reveal an unexpected role for convergent extension in shaping wing veins. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.14334.001


Physical Review E | 2017

Triangles bridge the scales: Quantifying cellular contributions to tissue deformation

Matthias Merkel; Raphaël Etournay; Marko Popović; Guillaume Salbreux; Suzanne Eaton; Frank Jülicher

In this article, we propose a general framework to study the dynamics and topology of cellular networks that capture the geometry of cell packings in two-dimensional tissues. Such epithelia undergo large-scale deformation during morphogenesis of a multicellular organism. Large-scale deformations emerge from many individual cellular events such as cell shape changes, cell rearrangements, cell divisions, and cell extrusions. Using a triangle-based representation of cellular network geometry, we obtain an exact decomposition of large-scale material deformation. Interestingly, our approach reveals contributions of correlations between cellular rotations and elongation as well as cellular growth and elongation to tissue deformation. Using this triangle method, we discuss tissue remodeling in the developing pupal wing of the fly Drosophila melanogaster.In this article, we propose a general framework to study the dynamics and topology of cellular networks that capture the geometry of cell packings in two-dimensional tissues. Such epithelia undergo large-scale deformation during morphogenesis of a multicellular organism. Large-scale deformations emerge from many individual cellular events such as cell shape changes, cell rearrangements, cell divisions, and cell extrusions. Using a triangle-based representation of cellular network geometry, we obtain an exact decomposition of large-scale material deformation. Interestingly, our approach reveals contributions of correlations between cellular rotations and elongation as well as cellular growth and elongation to tissue deformation. Using this Triangle Method, we discuss tissue remodeling in the developing pupal wing of the fly Drosophila melanogaster.


New Journal of Physics | 2017

Active dynamics of tissue shear flow

Marko Popović; Amitabha Nandi; Matthias Merkel; Raphaël Etournay; Suzanne Eaton; Frank Jülicher; Guillaume Salbreux

We propose a hydrodynamic theory to describe shear flows in developing epithelial tissues. We introduce hydrodynamic fields corresponding to state properties of constituent cells as well as a contribution to overall tissue shear flow due to rearrangements in cell network topology. We then construct a constitutive equation for the shear rate due to topological rearrangements. We identify a novel rheological behaviour resulting from memory effects in the tissue. We show that anisotropic deformation of tissue and cells can arise from two distinct active cellular processes: generation of active stress in the tissue, and actively driven cellular rearrangements. These two active processes result in distinct cellular and tissue shape changes, depending on boundary conditions applied on the tissue. Our findings have consequences for the understanding of tissue morphogenesis during development.


Development | 2017

Cell dynamics underlying oriented growth of the Drosophila wing imaginal disc

Natalie A. Dye; Marko Popović; Stephanie Spannl; Raphaël Etournay; Dagmar Kainmüller; Suhrid Ghosh; Eugene W. Myers; Frank Jülicher; Suzanne Eaton

Quantitative analysis of the dynamic cellular mechanisms shaping the Drosophila wing during its larval growth phase has been limited, impeding our ability to understand how morphogen patterns regulate tissue shape. Such analysis requires explants to be imaged under conditions that maintain both growth and patterning, as well as methods to quantify how much cellular behaviors change tissue shape. Here, we demonstrate a key requirement for the steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) in the maintenance of numerous patterning systems in vivo and in explant culture. We find that low concentrations of 20E support prolonged proliferation in explanted wing discs in the absence of insulin, incidentally providing novel insight into the hormonal regulation of imaginal growth. We use 20E-containing media to observe growth directly and to apply recently developed methods for quantitatively decomposing tissue shape changes into cellular contributions. We discover that whereas cell divisions drive tissue expansion along one axis, their contribution to expansion along the orthogonal axis is cancelled by cell rearrangements and cell shape changes. This finding raises the possibility that anisotropic mechanical constraints contribute to growth orientation in the wing disc. Summary: Identification of a requirement for 20-hydroxyecdysone in tissue patterning leads to the discovery that dynamic cell rearrangements and shape changes contribute to oriented tissue growth in the Drosophila wing disc.


Bioinformatics | 2017

PreMosa: extracting 2D surfaces from 3D microscopy mosaics

Corinna Blasse; Stephan Saalfeld; Raphaël Etournay; Andreas Sagner; Suzanne Eaton; Eugene W. Myers

Motivation: A significant focus of biological research is to understand the development, organization and function of tissues. A particularly productive area of study is on single layer epithelial tissues in which the adherence junctions of cells form a 2D manifold that is fluorescently labeled. Given the size of the tissue, a microscope must collect a mosaic of overlapping 3D stacks encompassing the stained surface. Downstream interpretation is greatly simplified by preprocessing such a dataset as follows: (i) extracting and mapping the stained manifold in each stack into a single 2D projection plane, (ii) correcting uneven illumination artifacts, (iii) stitching the mosaic planes into a single, large 2D image and (iv) adjusting the contrast. Results: We have developed PreMosa, an efficient, fully automatic pipeline to perform the four preprocessing tasks above resulting in a single 2D image of the stained manifold across which contrast is optimized and illumination is even. Notable features are as follows. First, the 2D projection step employs a specially developed algorithm that actually finds the manifold in the stack based on maximizing contrast, intensity and smoothness. Second, the projection step comes first, implying all subsequent tasks are more rapidly solved in 2D. And last, the mosaic melding employs an algorithm that globally adjusts contrasts amongst the 2D tiles so as to produce a seamless, high‐contrast image. We conclude with an evaluation using ground‐truth datasets and present results on datasets from Drosophila melanogaster wings and Schmidtae mediterranea ciliary components. Availability and Implementation: PreMosa is available under https://cblasse.github.io/premosa Contact: blasse@mpi‐cbg.de or myers@mpi‐cbg.de Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


bioRxiv | 2017

Cell Dynamics Underlying Oriented Growth Of The Drosophila Imaginal Wing Disc

Natalie A. Dye; Marko Popović; Stephanie Spannl; Raphaël Etournay; Dagmar Kainmueller; Eugene W. Myers; Frank Jülicher; Suzanne Eaton

Quantitative analysis of the dynamic cellular mechanisms shaping the Drosophila wing during its larval growth phase has been limited, impeding our ability to understand how morphogen patterns regulate tissue shape. Such analysis requires imaging explants under conditions that maintain both growth and patterning, as well as methods to quantify how much cellular behaviors change tissue shape. Here, we demonstrate a key requirement for the steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) in the maintenance of numerous patterning systems in vivo and in explant culture. We find that low concentrations of 20E support prolonged proliferation in explanted wing discs in the absence of insulin, incidentally providing novel insight into the hormonal regulation of imaginal growth. We use 20E-containing media to directly observe growth and apply recently developed methods for quantitatively decomposing tissue shape changes into cellular contributions. We discover that while cell divisions drive tissue expansion along one axis, their contribution to expansion along the orthogonal axis is cancelled by cell rearrangements and cell shape changes. This finding raises the possibility that anisotropic mechanical constraints contribute to growth orientation in the wing disc.


M S-medecine Sciences | 2011

Caresser la polarité planaire dans le sens du flot

Benoît Aigouy; Raphaël Etournay; Andreas Sagner; Douglas B. Staple; Reza Farhadifar; Jens-Christian Röper; Suzanne Eaton; Frank Jülicher

1. Schweisguth F. Bases génétiques de la polarité planaire. Med Sci (Paris) 2004 ; 20 : 424-30. 2. Simons M, Mlodzik M. Planar cell polarity signaling: from fly development to human disease. Annu Rev Genet 2008 ; 42 : 517-40. 3. El-Amraoui A, Petit C. Thérapie cellulaire dans l’oreille interne : nouveaux développements et perspectives. Med Sci (Paris) 2010 ; 26 : 981-5. 4. Amonlirdviman K, Khare NA, Tree DR, et al. Mathematical modeling of planar cell polarity to understand domineering nonautonomy. Science 2005 ; 307 : 423-6. 5. Tree DR, Ma D, Axelrod JD. A three-tiered mechanism for regulation of planar cell polarity. Semin Cell Dev Biol 2002 ; 13 : 217-24. 6. Tree DR, Shulman JM, Rousset R, et al. Prickle mediates feedback amplification to generate asymmetric planar cell polarity signaling. Cell 2002 ; 109 : 371-81. 7. Aigouy B, Farhadifar R, Staple DB, et al. Cell flow reorients the axis of planar polarity in the wing epithelium of Drosophila. Cell 2010 ; 142 : 773-86. 8. Classen AK, Anderson KI, Marois E, Eaton S. Hexagonal packing of Drosophila wing epithelial cells by the planar cell polarity pathway. Dev Cell 2005 ; 9 : 805-17. 9. De Gennes PG, Prost J. The physics of liquid crystals, 2e ed. Gloucestershire, UK : Clarendon Press, 1993. 10. Joanny JF, Julicher F, Kruse K, Prost J. Hydrodynamic theory for multi-component active polar gels. N J Phys 2007 ; 9 : 422. ment, permettrait d’aligner la polarité perpendiculairement au cisaillement, dans l’axe court de l’épithélium, comme c’est le cas dans la cochlée. Enfin, nos travaux montrent l’existence et l’importance d’une polarité planaire initiale dont l’origine reste à déterminer. ‡ Cell flow reorients planar polarity in the wing of Drosophila


Current Biology | 2014

The balance of prickle/spiny-legs isoforms controls the amount of coupling between core and fat PCP systems.

Matthias Merkel; Andreas Sagner; Franz Sebastian Gruber; Raphaël Etournay; Corinna Blasse; Eugene W. Myers; Suzanne Eaton; Frank Jülicher

Collaboration


Dive into the Raphaël Etournay's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge