Dynamics of an incoherent feedforward loop drive ERK-dependent pattern formation in the early Drosophila embryo

Author:

Ho Emily K.1ORCID,Oatman Harrison R.2,McFann Sarah E.3,Yang Liu4,Johnson Heath E.1,Shvartsman Stanislav Y.145ORCID,Toettcher Jared E.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Princeton University 1 Department of Molecular Biology , , Princeton, NJ 08544 , USA

2. Princeton University 2 Program in Quantitative and Computational Biology , , Princeton, NJ 08544 , USA

3. Princeton University 3 Department of Chemical & Biological Engineering , , Princeton, NJ 08544 , USA

4. Lewis Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Princeton University 4 , Princeton, NJ 08544 , USA

5. Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute - Simons Foundation 5 , New York, NY 10010 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Positional information in development often manifests as stripes of gene expression, but how stripes form remains incompletely understood. Here, we use optogenetics and live-cell biosensors to investigate the posterior brachyenteron (byn) stripe in early Drosophila embryos. This stripe depends on interpretation of an upstream ERK activity gradient and the expression of two target genes, tailless (tll) and huckebein (hkb), that exert antagonistic control over byn. We find that high or low doses of ERK signaling produce transient or sustained byn expression, respectively. Although tll transcription is always rapidly induced, hkb converts graded ERK inputs into a variable time delay. Nuclei thus interpret ERK amplitude through the relative timing of tll and hkb transcription. Antagonistic regulatory paths acting on different timescales are hallmarks of an incoherent feedforward loop, which is sufficient to explain byn dynamics and adds temporal complexity to the steady-state model of byn stripe formation. We further show that ‘blurring’ of an all-or-none stimulus through intracellular diffusion non-locally produces a byn stripe. Overall, we provide a blueprint for using optogenetics to dissect developmental signal interpretation in space and time.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Hertz Foundation

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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