4.7 Article

Synthetic Lateral Inhibition in Periodic Pattern Forming Microbial Colonies

Journal

ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages 277-285

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.0c00318

Keywords

synthetic biology; pattern formation; developmental biology; lateral inhibition

Funding

  1. European Research Council Advanced Grant (SYNCOM)
  2. Botin Foundation
  3. Banco Santander through its Santander Universities Global Division
  4. MINECO [FIS2015-67616-P]
  5. Secretaria d'Universitats i Recerca del Departament d'Economia i Coneixement de la Generalitat de Catalunya
  6. Santa Fe Institute

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This article discusses the characteristics of multicellular entities and their spatial patterns related to functions, as well as the repeating distributions in biological structures. It introduces patterning modules and synthetic gene circuits, along with the phenomenon of symmetry-breaking demonstrated through experimental results.
Multicellular entities are characterized by intricate spatial patterns, intimately related to the functions they perform. These patterns are often created from isotropic embryonic structures, without external information cues guiding the symmetry breaking process. Mature biological structures also display characteristic scales with repeating distributions of signals or chemical species across space. Many candidate patterning modules have been used to explain processes during development and typically include a set of interacting and diffusing chemicals or agents known as morphogens. Great effort has been put forward to better understand the conditions in which pattern-forming processes can occur in the biological domain. However, evidence and practical knowledge allowing us to engineer symmetry-breaking is still lacking. Here we follow a different approach by designing a synthetic gene circuit in E. coli that implements a local activation long-range inhibition mechanism. The synthetic gene network implements an artificial differentiation process that changes the physicochemical properties of the agents. Using both experimental results and modeling, we show that the proposed system is capable of symmetry-breaking leading to regular spatial patterns during colony growth. Studying how these patterns emerge is fundamental to further our understanding of the evolution of biocomplexity and the role played by self-organization. The artificial system studied here and the engineering perspective on embryogenic processes can help validate developmental theories and identify universal properties underpinning biological pattern formation, with special interest for the area of synthetic developmental biology.

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