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1.
Sci Adv ; 9(49): eadh8152, 2023 12 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38055823

RESUMEN

During vertebrate gastrulation, an embryo transforms from a layer of epithelial cells into a multilayered gastrula. This process requires the coordinated movements of hundreds to tens of thousands of cells, depending on the organism. In the chick embryo, patterns of actomyosin cables spanning several cells drive coordinated tissue flows. Here, we derive a minimal theoretical framework that couples actomyosin activity to global tissue flows. Our model predicts the onset and development of gastrulation flows in normal and experimentally perturbed chick embryos, mimicking different gastrulation modes as an active stress instability. Varying initial conditions and a parameter associated with active cell ingression, our model recapitulates distinct vertebrate gastrulation morphologies, consistent with recently published experiments in the chick embryo. Altogether, our results show how changes in the patterning of critical cell behaviors associated with different force-generating mechanisms contribute to distinct vertebrate gastrulation modes via a self-organizing mechanochemical process.


Asunto(s)
Actomiosina , Gastrulación , Animales , Embrión de Pollo , Gástrula , Vertebrados
2.
J R Soc Interface ; 20(208): 20230346, 2023 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37907091

RESUMEN

Prior research on evolutionary mechanisms during the origin of life has mainly assumed the existence of populations of discrete entities with information encoded in genetic polymers. Recent theoretical advances in autocatalytic chemical ecology establish a broader evolutionary framework that allows for adaptive complexification prior to the emergence of bounded individuals or genetic encoding. This framework establishes the formal equivalence of cells, ecosystems and certain localized chemical reaction systems as autocatalytic chemical ecosystems (ACEs): food-driven (open) systems that can grow due to the action of autocatalytic cycles (ACs). When ACEs are organized in meta-ecosystems, whether they be populations of cells or sets of chemically similar environmental patches, evolution, defined as change in AC frequency over time, can occur. In cases where ACs are enriched because they enhance ACE persistence or dispersal ability, evolution is adaptive and can build complexity. In particular, adaptive evolution can explain the emergence of self-bounded units (e.g. protocells) and genetic inheritance mechanisms. Recognizing the continuity between ecological and evolutionary change through the lens of autocatalytic chemical ecology suggests that the origin of life should be seen as a general and predictable outcome of driven chemical ecosystems rather than a phenomenon requiring specific, rare conditions.


Asunto(s)
Células Artificiales , Origen de la Vida , Humanos , Ecosistema , Catálisis
3.
J Theor Biol ; 507: 110451, 2020 12 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32800733

RESUMEN

It is becoming widely accepted that very early in life's origin, even before the emergence of genetic encoding, reaction networks of diverse small chemicals might have manifested key properties of life, namely self-propagation and adaptive evolution. To explore this possibility, we formalize the dynamics of chemical reaction networks within the framework of chemical ecosystem ecology. To capture the idea that life-like chemical systems are maintained out of equilibrium by fluxes of energy-rich food chemicals, we model chemical ecosystems in well-mixed compartments that are subject to constant dilution by a solution with a fixed concentration of input chemicals. Modelling all chemical reactions as fully reversible, we show that seeding an autocatalytic cycle with tiny amounts of one or more of its member chemicals results in logistic growth of all member chemicals in the cycle. This finding justifies drawing an instructive analogy between an autocatalytic cycle and a biological species. We extend this finding to show that pairs of autocatalytic cycles can exhibit competitive, predator-prey, or mutualistic associations just like biological species. Furthermore, when there is stochasticity in the environment, particularly in the seeding of autocatalytic cycles, chemical ecosystems can show complex dynamics that can resemble evolution. The evolutionary character is especially clear when the network architecture results in ecological precedence, which makes a system's trajectory historically contingent on the order in which cycles are seeded. For all its simplicity, the framework developed here helps explain the onset of adaptive evolution in prebiotic chemical reaction networks, and can shed light on the origin of key biological attributes such as thermodynamic irreversibility and genetic encoding.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Origen de la Vida , Catálisis , Modelos Biológicos
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