Horizons in Molecular Biology 2017: A unifying theory of branching morphogenesis

Horizons in Molecular Biology 2017

  • Datum: 12.09.2017
  • Uhrzeit: 12:15 - 13:00
  • Vortragende(r): Benjamin D. Simons
  • Wellcome Trust/Cancer Research UK Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge
  • Ort: Max-Planck-Institut für biophysikalische Chemie (MPIBPC)
  • Raum: Manfred Eigen Hall
  • Gastgeber: Horizons in Molecular Biology
  • Kontakt: participants.horizons@mpibpc.mpg.de
Plenary lecture of the 14th annual Horizons in Molecular Biology International PhD Symposium
Branching morphogenesis has been a subject of abiding interest. Although much is known about the underlying signaling pathways, it remains unclear how the macroscopic features of branched organs, including their size, network topology and spatial patterning, are encoded. Here we show that, in the mouse mammary gland, kidney, pancreas and human prostate, these features can be explained quantitatively within a single unifying framework of branching and annihilating random walks. Based on large-scale organ reconstructions, genetic lineage tracing and proliferation kinetics, we show that morphogenesis follows from the collective proliferative activity of equipotent progenitor pools localized at ductal tips that drive a process of ductal elongation and stochastic tip bifurcation. By correlating cell cycle exit with proximity to maturing ducts, this dynamics results in the specification of a complex network of defined density and statistical organization. These results show that branched epithelial structures in mammalian tissues develop as a self-organized process, reliant upon a strikingly simple, but generic, set of local rules, without recourse to a rigid and deterministic sequence of genetically programmed events.

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