Life Science Nature Is Weird

The physical roundness of the fluid-filled cavities in a developing brain tells stem cells exactly how to divide.

April 1, 2026

Original Paper

Synthetic lumen rounding directs neural progenitor division mode

Marchenko, M.; Martinez Ara, G.; Pulikkal, J.; Ishihara, K.; Ebisuya, M.

bioRxiv · 10.64898/2026.03.30.715222

The Takeaway

Researchers found that the geometric shape of the brain's interior acts as a mechanical instruction manual. By using optogenetics to force these cavities to round out, they could prematurely trigger stem cells to stop multiplying and start turning into mature brain tissue.

From the abstract

Although function often follows form, the causal role of tissue geometry is difficult to disentangle in complex embryonic development. Brain organoids generated using diverse protocols and species display striking morphological variability, particularly in lumen shape; however, whether and how lumen geometry influences neural development remains unclear. Here, we manipulate lumen sphericity in human cerebral organoids by acutely inducing apical constriction and reveal its impact on the division