Bridging single cells to organs: Mesoscale modules as fundamental units of tissue function

Cell. 2025 Nov 13;188(23):6393-6410. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.10.012.

Abstract

Recent studies at molecular and genomic scales have enriched our understanding of life's most fundamental building block: the cell. However, bridging the gap between single-cell phenotypes and the emergent functions of tissues and organs remains a formidable challenge. Here, we suggest that the conceptual span from cells to tissues and organs is so large as to warrant intermediate stepping stones. Drawing inspiration from "network motifs"-discrete units of cell-level function that emerge from the interactions of a handful of genes or enzymes-we argue that similarly identifiable units of tissue-level function, which we term "mesoscale modules," emerge from coordinated "interactions" among relatively small numbers of cells and their extracellular milieu. We outline several such modules and propose that a concerted effort to study them will deepen our foundational understanding of tissue and organ functions. By developing these mesoscale insights, we anticipate a more tractable and mechanistic approach to complex human conditions rooted in tissue- and organ-scale dysregulation, including developmental defects, cancer, cardiovascular disease, immune-related disorders, infectious disease, and aging.

Keywords: emergent properties; mesoscale modules; network motifs; systems biology; tissue biology.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Humans
  • Single-Cell Analysis*