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“Embryo-eggshell interaction counteracts chiral bias in early Drosophila morphogenesis”

Giulia Serafini, Maryam Setoudeh, Marina B. Cuenca, Charlène Brillard, Matthias Arzt, Pavel Mejstřik, Pierre A. Haas, Pavel Tomančák

Posted on: 19 May 2026

Preprint posted on 1 April 2026

Friction at the tip keeps the Drosophila germ band straight against innate instabilities.

Selected by Ruoheng Li

Categories: developmental biology

Background

  1. Germband Extension in Drosophila

Germband extension is a major morphogenetic event in early Drosophila development taking place in gastrulation stages, shortly after mesoderm invagination. During this process, the lateral epidermis narrows along the dorsal–ventral (D–V) axis and extends along the anterior-posterior (A–P) axis. After reaching the posterior pole of the embryo, as embryo shape and size is limited by the vitelline membrane, the germband tip makes a turn and continues to extend anteriorly along the dorsal side.

This drastic convergent extension is locally driven by cell neighbour exchange through junctional remodelling, while possible also taking contribution from tissue-level forces exerted by other morphogenetic movements happening at this stage.

  1. The Twisting Phenotype of scab Mutants

The αPS3 integrin Scab mediates adhesion between the blastoderm and the vitelline membrane. Loss‑of‑function scab mutants exhibit a striking “twisted” gastrulation phenotype, in which the germband rotates around the A–P axis like a corkscrew, breaking left–right (L–R) symmetry earlier than in wild‑type embryos.

 

Key Findings of the Preprint

  1. Germband Extension Is Inherently Variable Even in Wild Type

Live imaging and tracking of the dorsal germband tip revealed that ~43% of wild‑type embryos show measurable deviation from the longitudinal axis. Thus, germband extension is not perfectly straight but exhibits intrinsic variability.

Applying the same analysis to scab mutants showed increased deviation, particularly during the second phase of extension—when the germband extends anteriorly on the dorsal side—suggesting that Scab‑mediated attachment specifically stabilizes this phase.

Fig. 1 Germ band twisting is also observed in wild-type embryos. Figure adapted from the preprint where it is available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license.

 

  1. A Mechanical Model Predicts Shape Variability and Twisting

The authors developed a mechanical model in which the germband is represented by its midline, modelled as an elastic line subject to a pushing force representing active extension, a distributed friction along its length representing resistance from lateral tissues and the vitelline membrane, and a tip friction at the anterior end representing Scab-mediated attachment.

Depending on parameter combinations, the model exhibits three regimes:

  • Stable: small deviations decay and the line remains straight
  • Fluttering instability: deviation grows with the line oscillating – not observed in embryos
  • Unstable: deviation grows monotonically – resembles twisting

A key prediction is that the unstable regime requires, relatively, low tip friction perpendicular to the line and high tip friction opposing it. This is consistent with scab mutants, where the former is reduced due to loss of attachment, while the latter still has contribution from the amnioserosa ahead opposing anterior movement.

Fig 2. Setup and phase diagram of germband midline mechanical model. Figure adapted from the preprint where it is available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license.

 

  1. Twisting Shows a Leftward Bias Controlled by myo1D

Twisted embryos show a significant leftward bias, independent of genotype. Tissue‑level flow analysis revealed higher strain and curl on the left side, and left‑side cells deform more strongly during extension.

The model can reproduce this bias by introducing asymmetric bending modulus—i.e., making the midline easier to bend in one direction than the other—this allows instability in only one direction.

The authors identify Myo1D, a known determinant of embryonic chirality, as the source of this bias. Myo1D is expressed in the germband throughout extension. myo1D RNAi abolishes the leftward bias, while maternal overexpression increases both the frequency of twisting and the proportion of leftward twists.

Fig 3. Manipulating Myo1D levels changes bias in twisting direction. Figure adapted from the preprint where it is available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license.

 

Questions for the Authors

  1. Temporal behaviour of deviation: In wild‑type embryos, deviation appears to increase initially and then plateau. Can the mechanical model also explain this temporal behaviour?
  2. Correction mechanisms: Do twisted germbands eventually straighten during later development? Do you think there might be additional curvature correction mechanisms further safeguarding axis straightness?
  3. Source of directional bias: Beyond asymmetric bending modulus, could a bias in the initial stochastic deviation itself also contribute to the leftward bias in twisting direction?

References

Stern T, Shvartsman SY, Wieschaus EF. Deconstructing gastrulation at single-cell resolution. Curr Biol. 2022;32(8):1861-1868.e7. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2022.02.059

Kong D, Wolf F, Großhans J. Forces directing germ-band extension in Drosophila embryos. Mech Dev. 2017;144(Pt A):11-22. doi:10.1016/j.mod.2016.12.001

Münster S, Jain A, Mietke A, Pavlopoulos A, Grill SW, Tomancak P. Attachment of the blastoderm to the vitelline envelope affects gastrulation of insects. Nature. 2019;568(7752):395-399. doi:10.1038/s41586-019-1044-3

 

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Author's response

The author team shared

Q1. Our linear stability analysis of the mechanical model determines
whether the germband shape is stable to small perturbations. If it is
unstable and the amplitude of the perturbations grows, then nonlinear
effects will eventually start to matter. One expects such effects to
counteract the growth of the instability, and hence select a plateau
value of the deviation. Understanding how the mechanics select this
value is an interesting open problem, that should be addressed within a
extended model that resolves the full three-dimensional geometry of the
embryo.

Q2. Yes, even the most twisted germ bands of wild type embryos
straighten during germ band retraction. We can speculate that this
reflects a general transcriptional and mechanical reset of embryonic
processes during the insect phylotypic stage. End of germ band extension
and germ band retraction are separated by a considerable period of time.
The overall tissue mechanical situation is influenced by the dynamics of
amnioserosa and Scab plays a role in the amnioserosa cell spreading over
the germ band. Therefore, the phenotype during retraction is complex;
however, we did observe straightening of the embryo even in severely
twisted scab mutants.

Q3. Our data support the emergence of a leftward bias during the later
phase of germ band extension, and we propose that this bias is due to
Myo1D expression. The initial deviations of the germ band tip appear
indeed random, as reported previously by Smits et al. It could well be
that these early stochastic deviations sometimes counteract the
Myo1D-mediated leftward bias of the germ band extension and, in fact,
lower its frequency. (We add that an asymmetric bending modulus is an
effective representation of the asymmetries of tissue flows that we
observe.)

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