M Shane Hutson 2008 Phys. Biol. 5 doi:10.1088/1478-3975/5/1/E01
M Shane Hutson1
Show affiliationsThere is a long and circuitous route from an organism_s genome to its steady-state adult form—all of which falls under the wide umbrella of developmental biology. Given this breadth, how does one answer the question: what is the mechanism by which developmental event X takes place? The answer depends strongly on what one considers an acceptable explanation. In some scientific circles, the answer would focus on the regulatory genes involved. In others, the focus would be on the signaling pathways activated, or on the associated cellular movements, or maybe even on the intra- and intercellular forces. In the long term, the goal must be to provide an explanation that connects all of these perspectives.
During the last several decades, molecular biology has made enormous progress towards understanding development from the genome-side. Unfortunately, progress has been much slower on the relevant physical biology—which had a huge head start in the late 19th century age of developmental mechanics. It is just a slight exaggeration to claim that we_ve made little progress on the physical side since D_Arcy Thompson_s On Growth and Form in 1917. Hopefully, such statements will be recognized as large exaggerations in years to come as developmental mechanics is now in resurgence.
This special issue of Physical Biology brings together current work in developmental mechanics from an international cadre of scientists—including physicists, biologists and engineers. The works include both models and experiments. They span scales from subcellular microrheology to finite element models of entire embryos. I hope that students looking for one of these articles will dive into the rest. The field of developmental mechanics is in the process of training a new generation of students who are comfortable with both the necessary biology and physics. Enormous opportunities are available for those who can work across those traditional disciplinary boundaries.
Issue 1 (March 2006)
M Shane Hutson 2008 Phys. Biol. 5
L Hartmann et al 2007 New J. Phys. 9 230
M Shahinpoor et al 1998 Smart Mater. Struct. 7 R15
Valter Moretti and Stefan Steidl 1996 Class. Quantum Grav. 13 2121
Dejan S Milojicic et al 1998 Distrib. Syst. Engng. 5 214
R R Brau et al 2007 J. Opt. A: Pure Appl. Opt. 9 S103
Vitali Stsiapura et al 2006 Nanotechnology 17 581
A L Thomann et al 2000 Plasma Sources Sci. Technol. 9 176
Z Wu et al 1995 Distrib. Syst. Engng. 2 50
A Razet and S Picard 1999 Metrologia 36 159