First-order patterning transitions on a sphere as a route to cell morphology
Maxim O. Lavrentovich, Eric M. Horsley, Asja Radja, Alison M. Sweeney,, and Randall D. Kamien

TL;DR
This paper develops a theory for biological surface patterning as a first-order phase transition on spherical surfaces, explaining pattern diversity, robustness, and defect accommodation in various organisms.
Contribution
It extends Brazovskii's transition theory to spherical geometries, revealing how topology influences pattern variety and defect structures in biological systems.
Findings
Patterns on spheres are more diverse than on flat sheets.
Topology induces defects that influence pattern formation.
First-order transition explains pattern reproducibility.
Abstract
We propose a general theory for surface patterning in many different biological systems, including mite and insect cuticles, pollen grains, fungal spores, and insect eggs. The patterns of interest are often intricate and diverse, yet an individual pattern is robustly reproducible by a single species and a similar set of developmental stages produces a variety of patterns. We argue that the pattern diversity and reproducibility may be explained by interpreting the pattern development as a first-order phase transition to a spatially modulated phase. Brazovskii showed that for such transitions on a flat, infinite sheet, the patterns are uniform striped or hexagonal. Biological objects, however, have finite extent and offer different topologies, such as the spherical surfaces of pollen grains. We consider Brazovskii transitions on spheres and show that the patterns have a richer…
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