info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Information flow in the presence of cell mixing and signaling delays during embryonic development
Fecha
2019-09Registro en:
Petrungaro, Gabriela; Morelli, Luis Guillermo; Uriu, Koichiro; Information flow in the presence of cell mixing and signaling delays during embryonic development; Academic Press Ltd - Elsevier Science Ltd; Seminars In Cell & Developmental Biology; 93; 9-2019; 26-35
1084-9521
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Petrungaro, Gabriela
Morelli, Luis Guillermo
Uriu, Koichiro
Resumen
Embryonic morphogenesis is organized by an interplay between intercellular signaling and cell movements. Both intercellular signaling and cell movement involve multiple timescales. A key timescale for signaling is the time delay caused by preparation of signaling molecules and integration of received signals into cells’ internal state. Movement of cells relative to their neighbors may introduce exchange of positions between cells during signaling. When cells change their relative positions in a tissue, the impact of signaling delays on intercellular signaling increases because the delayed information that cells receive may significantly differ from the present state of the tissue. The time it takes to perform a neighbor exchange sets a timescale of cell mixing that may be important for the outcome of signaling. Here we review recent theoretical work on the interplay of timescales between cell mixing and signaling delays adopting the zebrafish segmentation clock as a model system. We discuss how this interplay can lead to spatial patterns of gene expression that could disrupt the normal formation of segment boundaries in the embryo. The effect of cell mixing and signaling delays highlights the importance of theoretical and experimental frameworks to understand collective cellular behaviors arising from the interplay of multiple timescales in embryonic developmental processes.