2025-12-17 スタンフォード大学

The researchers studied placozoa to see how it manages to successfully fold and unfold from complex shapes – without a brain. To highlight this animal’s origami-like prowess, they’ve described their discovery in a paper-based stop-motion video. | Charlotte Brannon / Prakash Lab
<関連情報>
- https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2025/12/placozoa-research-tissue-folding
- https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2517741122
初期に分岐した動物における繊毛駆動型上皮の折り畳みと展開 Cilia-driven epithelial folding and unfolding in an early diverging animal
Charlotte M. Brannon and Manu Prakash
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Published:December 16, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2517741122
Significance
Our findings unveil a unique epithelial folding–unfolding transition exhibited by the early diverging animal Trichoplax adhaerens. We demonstrate that T. adhaerens displays high-curvature body folding states as a function of substrate geometry, constituting a class of epithelial folding driven by dynamic substrate adhesion and distributed cellular activity. In contrast to the highly programmed folding processes in animal development, our study highlights an example of variable folding states arising from stochastic ciliary active-adhesion. These findings provide an example for the broad configuration space of unconstrained active thin-sheet folding, laying groundwork for future efforts to program thin-sheet folding in both living tissues and nonliving materials and establishing a model system for studying thin-sheet folding mechanics.
Abstract
Multicellular organisms utilize epithelial folding to achieve remarkable three-dimensional forms. During embryonic development, stereotypical epithelial folds emerge from underlying active cellular and molecular processes including cell shape change and differential cell growth. However, the origin of epithelial folding in early animals and how folding may be harnessed in synthetic systems remain open questions. Here, we identify a modality of behavior-induced epithelial folding and unfolding arising from cilia–substrate adhesion and ciliary walking in the basal animal Trichoplax adhaerens (phylum Placozoa). We show that T. adhaerens is capable of exhibiting dynamic nonstereotyped folding states, providing a 3D perspective to an organism previously only characterized in its 2D state. We correlate these folding states to local substrate geometry, revealing that the animal conforms to available substrate surface area, promoting the maintenance of a folded state. Using 4D fluorescence light sheet microscopy, we characterize fold geometry, curvature evolution during unfolding, and the nonstereotypy of unfolding behavior. Through repeated unfolding trials, we reveal the robustness and timescales associated with unfolding behavior and employ scaling analysis and toy model simulations to establish how collective ciliary activity can robustly drive unfolding. In this way, despite lacking any folding–unfolding “pathway,” transitions between folding and unfolding states emerge as a function of the animal’s environment and motility. Our work reveals a remarkable behavior exhibited by a brainless, nerveless animal, and demonstrates the capacity for 3D–2D transitions in folding epithelial sheets using ciliary activity.


