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Lumens as active balloons: a biological physics review

Lumens are cavities enclosed by polarized cells that are essential for organ function, from nutrient transport in the gut to gas exchange in the lungs. Defects in lumen formation are associated with severe diseases, including polycystic kidney disease and respiratory malformations. The emergence, growth, and maintenance of lumens involve a rich set of phenomena that can be framed within out-of-equilibrium physics and biological active matter, including osmotically driven hydraulic flows, coarsening-like dynamics, morphological instabilities, and mechanochemical feedbacks linking luminal pressure to tissue response. Yet experimental and theoretical efforts to study these phenomena have largely developed within specific biological systems, complicating the identification of shared physical principles across them. In this review, we bring these efforts together and present lumenogenesis within a biological physics framework in which lumens are viewed as active balloons: pressurized cavities that are inflated, sculpted, and maintained through tightly coupled active processes.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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