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© Melody Merle
Fluorescently labeled five day old gastruloid, a mouse embryonic stem-cell derived pseudo-embryo.
Publication : Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Scale invariance in early embryonic development.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America - 12 Nov 2024

Nikolić M, Antonetti V, Liu F, Muhaxheri G, Petkova MD, Scheeler M, Smith EM, Bialek W, Gregor T

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 39514304

Link to DOI – 10.1073/pnas.2403265121

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2024 Nov; 121(46): e2403265121

The expression of a few key genes determines the body plan of the fruit fly. We show that the spatial expression patterns for several of these genes scale precisely with embryo size. Discrete positional markers such as the peaks in striped patterns or the boundaries of expression domains have positions along the embryo’s major axis proportional to embryo length, accurate to within 1%. Further, the information (in bits) that graded patterns of expression provide about a cell’s position can be decomposed into information about fractional or scaled position and information about absolute position or embryo length; all information available is about scaled position, with [Formula: see text]2% error. These findings imply that the underlying genetic network’s behavior exhibits scale invariance in a more precise mathematical sense. We argue that models that can explain this scale invariance also have a “zero mode” in the dynamics of gene expression, and this connects to observations on the spatial correlation of fluctuations in expression levels.