Morphogen-regulated contact-mediated signaling between cells can drive the transitions underlying body segmentation in vertebrates

Author:

Kuyyamudi ChandrashekarORCID,Menon Shakti NORCID,Sinha SitabhraORCID

Abstract

Abstract We propose a unified mechanism that reproduces the sequence of dynamical transitions observed during somitogenesis, the process of body segmentation during embryonic development, that is invariant across all vertebrate species. This is achieved by combining inter-cellular interactions mediated via receptor-ligand coupling with global spatial heterogeneity introduced through a morphogen gradient known to occur along the anteroposterior axis. Our model reproduces synchronized oscillations in the gene expression in cells at the anterior of the presomitic mesoderm as it grows by adding new cells at its posterior, followed by travelling waves and subsequent arrest of activity, with the eventual appearance of somite-like patterns. This framework integrates a boundary-organized pattern formation mechanism, which uses positional information provided by a morphogen gradient, with the coupling-mediated self-organized emergence of collective dynamics, to explain the processes that lead to segmentation.

Funder

Department of Atomic Energy, Government of India

Department of Science and Technology, Government of India

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Structural Biology,Biophysics

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