Tissue Patterning During Development

Qing Nie
University of California at Irvine
Dept. of Mathematics

Many patterns of cell and tissue organization are
specified during development by gradients of morphogens,
substances that assign different cell fates at
different concentrations. Gradients form by morphogen
transport from a localized site, but whether this
occurs by simple diffusion or by more elaborate mechanisms is
unclear. We attempt to resolve this controversy by
analysis and computations of ligand-receptor models of the system.
In addition we examine recent experimental data in
ways that appropriately capture the complexity of the systems
in which transport, receptor interaction, endo- and exocytosis,
and degradation occur together.
We find that diffusive mechanisms of morphogen transport
are much more plausible- and nondiffusive mechanisms much
less plausible-than has generally been argued.
At the end of the talk,
I will discuss the applications of the ligand-receptor
model to other tissue patterning problems.


Back to Cells & Materials: at the Tissue Engineering Interface