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Authors Rados, T.; Leland, O. S.; Escudeiro, P.; Mallon, J.; Andre, K.; Caspy, I.; von Kügelgen, A.; Stolovicki, E.; Nguyen, S.; Patop, I. L.; Rangel, L. T.; Kadener, S.; Renner, L. D.; Thiel, V.; Soen, Y.; Bharat, T. A. M.; Alva, V.; Bisson, A.
Title Tissue-like multicellular development triggered by mechanical compression in archaea
Date 03.04.2025
Number 0
Abstract The advent of clonal multicellularity is a critical evolutionary milestone, seen often in eukaryotes, rarely in bacteria, and only once in archaea. We show that uniaxial compression induces clonal multicellularity in haloarchaea, forming tissue-like structures. These archaeal tissues are mechanically and molecularly distinct from their unicellular lifestyle, mimicking several eukaryotic features. Archaeal tissues undergo a multinucleate stage followed by tubulin-independent cellularization, orchestrated by active membrane tension at a critical cell size. After cellularization, tissue junction elasticity becomes akin to that of animal tissues, giving rise to two cell types—peripheral (Per) and central scutoid (Scu) cells—with distinct actin and protein glycosylation polarity patterns. Our findings highlight the potential convergent evolution of a biophysical mechanism in the emergence of multicellular systems across domains of life.
Publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science
Wikidata
Citation Science 388 (2025) 109-115
DOI https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adu0047
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