Stable developmental patterns of gene expression without morphogen gradients
Maciej Majka, Nils B. Becker, Pieter Rein ten Wolde, Marcin Zagorski,, and Thomas R. Sokolowski

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that gene expression patterns can remain stable during development without morphogen gradients by fine-tuning gene regulatory interactions, supported by simulations and stability theory.
Contribution
It reveals how metastable gene expression patterns are maintained without morphogen cues through optimal tuning of gene repression interactions, combining simulations and theoretical analysis.
Findings
Optimal weak repression enhances pattern stability significantly.
Metastable attractors enable stable gene expression without positional cues.
Numerical results align with stability theory predictions.
Abstract
Gene expression patterns (GEPs) are established by cross-regulating target genes that interpret morphogen gradients. However, as development progresses, morphogen activity is reduced, leaving the emergent GEP without stabilizing positional cues. The GEP then can be deteriorated by the intrinsically noisy biochemical processes acting at the cellular level. However, the established GEPs remain spatio-temporally stable in many biological systems. Here we combine spatial-stochastic simulations with an enhanced sampling method (Non-Stationary Forward Flux Sampling) and a recently developed stability theory to address how spatiotemporal integrity of a GEP is maintained without morphogen gradients. Using a minimal embryo model consisting of spatially coupled biochemical reactor volumes, we study a stripe pattern in which weak cross-repression between nearest neighbor domians alternates with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infectious Diseases and Gene Expression in Insects · bioluminescence and chemiluminescence research · Animal Genetics and Reproduction
