Tissue growth
Tissue growth is the biological process by which a tissue increases its size. In animals, tissue growth occurs during embryonic development, post-natal growth, and tissue regeneration. The fundamental cellular basis for tissue growth is the process of cell proliferation, which involves both cell growth and cell division occurring in parallel.
How cell proliferation is controlled during tissue growth to determine final tissue size is an open question in biology. Uncontrolled tissue growth is a cause of cancer.
Differential rates of cell proliferation within an organ can influence proportions, as can the orientation of cell divisions, and thus tissue growth contributes to shaping tissues along with other mechanisms of tissue morphogenesis.
Mechanisms of tissue growth control in animals
Mechanical control of tissue growth in animal skin
For some animal tissues, such as mammalian skin, it is clear that the growth of the skin is ultimately determined by the size of the body whose surface area the skin covers. This suggests that cell proliferation in skin stem cells within the basal layer is likely to be mechanically controlled to ensure that the skin covers the surface of the entire body. Growth of the body causes mechanical stretching of the skin, which is sensed by skin stem cells within the basal layer and consequently leads to both an increased rate of cell proliferation as well as promoting the planar orientation of stem cell divisions to produce new skin stem cells, rather than only producing differentiating supra-basal daughter cells.Cell proliferation in skin stem cells within the basal layer can be driven by the mechanically-regulated YAP/TAZ family of transcriptional co-activators, which bind to TEAD-family DNA binding transcription factors in the nucleus to activate target gene expression and thereby drive cell proliferation.
For other animal tissues, such as the bones of the skeleton or the internal mammalian organs intestine, pancreas, kidney or brain, it remains unclear how developmental gene regulatory networks encoded in the genome lead to organs of such different sizes and proportions.