Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

Emergent properties during dorsal closure in Drosophila morphogenesis

X G Peralta1, Y Toyama2, D P Kiehart3 and G S Edwards2

Show affiliations


Dorsal closure is an essential stage of Drosophila development that is a model system for research in morphogenesis and biological physics. Dorsal closure involves an orchestrated interplay between gene expression and cell activities that produce shape changes, exert forces and mediate tissue dynamics. We investigate the dynamics of dorsal closure based on confocal microscopic measurements of cell shortening in living embryos. During the mid-stages of dorsal closure we find that there are fluctuations in the width of the leading edge cells but the time-averaged analysis of measurements indicate that there is essentially no net shortening of cells in the bulk of the leading edge, that contraction predominantly occurs at the canthi as part of the process for zipping together the two leading edges of epidermis and that the rate constant for zipping correlates with the rate of movement of the leading edges. We characterize emergent properties that regulate dorsal closure, i.e., a velocity governor and the coordination and synchronization of tissue dynamics.


PACS

87.18.Ed Cell aggregation

87.18.-h Biological complexity

87.15.H- Dynamics of biomolecules

87.17.Jj Cell locomotion, chemotaxis

Subjects

Biological physics

Dates

Issue 1 (March 2008)

Received 11 December 2007, accepted for publication 20 February 2008

Published 9 April 2008

 
Image from Emergent properties during dorsal closure in Drosophila morphogenesis


Related review articles

What's this?
View review articles related to this research to gain an insight into the key trends in this subject area. Related review articles are selected based on PACS/MSC codes, and are no more than three years old.

  1. Nonlinear dynamics of the brain: emotion and cognition

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.