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research article

Intercellular coupling regulates the period of the segmentation clock

Herrgen, L.
•
Ares, S.
•
Morelli, L. G.
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2010
Current Biology

Background: Coupled biological oscillators can tick with the same period. How this collective period is established is a key question in understanding biological clocks. We explore this question in the segmentation clock, a population of coupled cellular oscillators in the vertebrate embryo that sets the rhythm of somitogenesis, the morphological segmentation of the body axis. The oscillating cells of the zebrafish segmentation clock are thought to possess noisy autonomous periods, which are synchronized by intercellular coupling through the Delta-Notch pathway. Here we ask whether Delta-Notch coupling additionally influences the collective period of the segmentation clock. Results: Using multiple-embryo time-lapse microscopy, we show that disruption of Delta-Notch intercellular coupling increases the period of zebrafish somitogenesis. Embryonic segment length and the spatial wavelength of oscillating gene expression also increase correspondingly, indicating an increase in the segmentation clock's period. Using a theory based on phase oscillators in which the collective period self-organizes because of time delays in coupling, we estimate the cell-autonomous period, the coupling strength, and the coupling delay from our data. Further supporting the role of coupling delays in the clock, we predict and experimentally confirm an instability resulting from decreased coupling delay time. Conclusions: Synchronization of cells by Delta-Notch coupling regulates the collective period of the segmentation clock. Our identification of the first segmentation clock period mutants is a critical step toward a molecular understanding of temporal control in this system. We propose that collective control of period via delayed coupling may be a general feature of biological clocks. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.cub.2010.06.034
Scopus ID

2-s2.0-78149276327

Author(s)
Herrgen, L.
Ares, S.
Morelli, L. G.
Schröter, C.
Jülicher, F.
Oates, A. C.  
Date Issued

2010

Published in
Current Biology
Volume

20

Issue

14

Start page

1244

End page

1253

Subjects

Danio rerio

•

Ixodida

•

Vertebrata

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
UPOATES  
Available on Infoscience
May 30, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/137768
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