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Epithelial polarization by the planar cell polarity complex is exclusively non–cell autonomous

Lena P. Basta, Bradley Joyce, Eszter Pósfai, Danelle Devenport

2025Science20 citationsDOI

Abstract

For cells to polarize collectively along a tissue plane, asymmetrically localized planar cell polarity (PCP) complexes must form intercellular contacts between neighboring cells. Yet, it is unknown whether asymmetric segregation of PCP complexes requires cell-cell contact, or if cell autonomous, antagonistic interactions are sufficient for polarization. To test this, we generated mouse chimeras consisting of dual PCP-reporter cells mixed with unlabeled cells that cannot form PCP bridges. In the absence of intercellular interactions, PCP proteins failed to polarize cell autonomously. Rather, PCP-mediated contacts along single cell-cell interfaces were sufficient to sort PCP components to opposite sides of the junction, independent of junction orientation. Thus, intercellular binding of PCP complexes is the critical step that initiates sorting of opposing PCP complexes to generate asymmetry.

Topics & Concepts

IntracellularCell polarityCellCell junctionCell biologyPolarity (international relations)BiophysicsPlanarCell sortingPolarization (electrochemistry)Cell divisionChemistryBiologyBiochemistryPhysical chemistryComputer scienceComputer graphics (images)Wnt/β-catenin signaling in development and cancerDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationCellular Mechanics and Interactions
Epithelial polarization by the planar cell polarity complex is exclusively non–cell autonomous | Litcius