The impact of cellular characteristics on the evolution of shape homeostasis
Philip Gerlee, David Basanta, Alexander R.A. Anderson

TL;DR
This study uses an individual-based model to explore how cellular characteristics like communication, polarization, and environmental stability influence the evolution of robust, homeostatic multicellular structures.
Contribution
It systematically investigates the effects of various cellular traits on the emergence of stable structures, highlighting the importance of long-range communication and environmental instability.
Findings
Long-range growth factors significantly improve structural fitness.
Cell polarization and short-range factors also aid in robustness.
Structures evolved under unstable conditions are more adaptable and resilient.
Abstract
The importance of individual cells in a developing multicellular organism is well known but precisely how the individual cellular characteristics of those cells collectively drive the emergence of robust, homeostatic structures is less well understood. For example cell communication via a diffusible factor allows for information to travel across large distances within the population, and cell polarisation makes it possible to form structures with a particular orientation, but how do these processes interact to produce a more robust and regulated structure? In this study we investigate the ability of cells with different cellular characteristics to grow and maintain homeostatic structures. We do this in the context of an individual-based model where cell behaviour is driven by an intra-cellular network that determines the cell phenotype. More precisely, we investigated evolution with 96…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Planarian Biology and Electrostimulation · Slime Mold and Myxomycetes Research
