Publication: Interpretation of morphogen gradients by a synthetic bistable circuit

OpenPlant PIs Prof Jim Haseloff and Dr James Locke (University of Cambridge) recently published collaborative work on a synthetic morphogen-induced mutual inhibition circuit in E. coli populations.

Interpretation of morphogen gradients by a synthetic bistable circuit

Paul K. Grant, Gregory Szep, Om Patange, Jacob Halatek, Valerie Coppard, Attila Csikász-Nagy, Jim Haseloff, James C. W. Locke, Neil Dalchau & Andrew Phillips

Nature Communications (2020) 11: 5545

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-19098-w

Abstract

During development, cells gain positional information through the interpretation of dynamic morphogen gradients. A proposed mechanism for interpreting opposing morphogen gradients is mutual inhibition of downstream transcription factors, but isolating the role of this specific motif within a natural network remains a challenge. Here, we engineer a synthetic morphogen-induced mutual inhibition circuit in E. coli populations and show that mutual inhibition alone is sufficient to produce stable domains of gene expression in response to dynamic morphogen gradients, provided the spatial average of the morphogens falls within the region of bistability at the single cell level. When we add sender devices, the resulting patterning circuit produces theoretically predicted self-organised gene expression domains in response to a single gradient. We develop computational models of our synthetic circuits parameterised to timecourse fluorescence data, providing both a theoretical and experimental framework for engineering morphogen-induced spatial patterning in cell populations.