Magnifying glasses are thicker in the centre, and thinner around the edge. Each unit of a fruit fly eye has a similarly shaped corneal lens to bend and focus light. To understand how this biconvex shape is produced, researchers examined the role of a main component: chitin. Chitin is secreted by cells and helps form a scaffold between cells. Reducing production made lenses thinner and less curved. If production was increased specifically in cells at the edges of the lens (pictured, chitin in green), just the periphery thickened. The results show that the natural shape results from relatively high levels of chitin produced by central cells, and illustrates that organ shape can be sculpted not just by cells themselves, but also by the extracellular matrix between them. Although not produced in humans, chitin is used in biomedicine, so understanding how such scaffolds support biological structures could inform biomaterial design.
Image made using Leica Microsystems microscopy
Written by
BPoD stands for Biomedical Picture of the Day. Managed by the MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences until Jul 2023, it is now run independently by a dedicated team of scientists and writers. The website aims to engage everyone, young and old, in the wonders of biology, and its influence on medicine. The ever-growing archive of more than 4000 research images documents over a decade of progress. Explore the collection and see what you discover. Images are kindly provided for inclusion on this website through the generosity of scientists across the globe.
BPoD is also available in Catalan at www.bpod.cat with translations by the University of Valencia.