Cell density controls signal propagation waves in a multicellular synthetic gene circuit
Marco Santorelli, Pranav Bhamidipati, Andriu Kavanagh, Victoria Fitts,, Trusha Sondkar, Matt Thomson, and Leonardo Morsut

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how cell density influences signal propagation in a synthetic gene circuit, enabling control over pattern formation and wave dynamics in multicellular systems.
Contribution
It reveals the impact of physical environment, specifically cell density, on synthetic gene circuit behavior and provides methods to manipulate patterning in multicellular constructs.
Findings
Cell density attenuates signal propagation in synthetic circuits.
Different propagation phases depend on cell growth parameters.
Density modulation controls tissue-scale activation and wave patterns.
Abstract
During organismal development, biochemical reaction networks sense and respond to mechanical forces to coordinate embryonic patterning with embryo morphogenesis. Factors such as cortical tension, cell density, and matrix mechanical properties influence differentiation and cell fate decisions by modulating gene regulatory signaling networks. A major goal in synthetic development is to construct gene regulatory circuits that program the patterning and morphogenesis of synthetic multicellular structures. However, in the synthetic context, little is known regarding how the physical properties of the growth environment impact the behavior of synthetic gene circuits. Here, we exploit physical-chemical coupling observed in a synthetic patterning circuit in order to control the size and spatial distribution of patterned synthetic cell sheets. We show that cell density attenuates the propagation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGene Regulatory Network Analysis · CRISPR and Genetic Engineering · Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology
