Title: The Course of Development
1(No Transcript)
2The Course of Development
3The Course of Development
Time
Events
4The Course of Development
Time
Events
5The Course of Development
Time
Events in time
6The Course of Development
Time
Events in time
7The Course of Development
Time
Events in time and space . . .
8The Course of Development
Time
Events in time and space . . .
9The Course of Development
Time
Events in time and space . . .
10The Course of Development
Events in time and space . . .
. . . driven by patterned gene expression
11The Course of Development
Understanding Human Development
Events in time and space . . . . . . driven
by patterned gene expression
12The Course of Development
Understanding Human Development
13The Course of Development
Understanding Human Development
14The Course of Development
Understanding Human Development
The fate of cells
Intrinsic control?
patterned in time and space
Extrinsic control?
15Understanding Human Development
Why so difficult?
Process 9 mo 20 yrs
Generation 20 yrs
Genetic recombination Uncontrolled
Genetic manipulation Difficult / Impossible
Genome size 3 billion nucleotides
Development Complex
How to attack a problem thats too complex?
16How to Attack a Complex Problem
Probability of getting a full house?
17How to Attack a Complex Problem
Probability of getting a pair?
18How to Attack a Complex Problem
1
3/51
Probability of getting a pair in 2 cards?
19Simplification can help in understanding complexit
y
20Understanding Human Development
Why so difficult?
Process 9 mo 20 yrs
Generation 20 yrs
Genetic recombination Uncontrolled
Genetic manipulation Difficult / Impossible
Genome size 3 billion nucleotides
Development Complex
21Understanding Fly Development
Still difficult
Process 9 mo 20 yrs
8 days
Generation 20 yrs
14 days
Genetic recombination Uncontrolled
Controlled
Genetic manipulation Difficult / Impossible
Difficult
Genome size 3 billion nucleotides
170 million nucleotides
Development Complex
Complex
How to simplify further?
22Understanding Any Development
What do we want in a model organism?
Process
8 days
Hours
Generation
14 days
Hours
Genetic recombination
Controlled
Genetic manipulation
Difficult
Easy
Genome size
170 million nucleotides
Few million nucleotides
Development
Complex
Single phenomenon
Does such an organism exist?
23Bacteria
E. coli
. . . but no development
24Bacillus subtilisTemporally regulated
differentiation
Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
25Bacillus subtilisTemporally regulated
differentiation
Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
26Bacillus subtilisTemporally regulated
differentiation
Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
27Bacillus subtilisTemporally regulated
differentiation
Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
28Bacillus subtilisTemporally regulated
differentiation
Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
Development in time and space
29Free-living Nostoc
Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
N2
CO2
O2
Matveyev and Elhai (unpublished)
30Free-living Nostoc
Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
NH3
N2
O2
CO2
Matveyev and Elhai (unpublished)
31AnabaenaSpatially regulated differentiation
Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
N2 fixation
32AnabaenaSpatially regulated differentiation
Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
33AnabaenaSpatially regulated differentiation
Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
Development of pattern
Mark Hill, University of New South
Wales http//anatomy.med.unsw.edu.au/cbl/embryo/No
tes/skmus7.htm
34Fruiting body formation by Myxococcus
Herd motility
35Fruiting body formation by Myxococcus
Herd development
36Fruiting body formation by Myxococcus
Extrinsic control over development
37Caulobacter crescentusCell cycle-regulated
differentiation
Cell cycle of Caulobacter
swarmercell
38Caulobacter crescentusCell cycle-regulated
differentiation
Cell cycle of Caulobacter
swarmercell
stalkcell
39Caulobacter crescentusCell cycle-regulated
differentiation
Cell cycle of Caulobacter
swarmercell
stalkcell
40Caulobacter crescentusCell cycle-regulated
differentiation
Cell cycle of Caulobacter
Intrinsic control over development
41Bacterial Development
End result...
much simpler
Anabaena heterocysts
Bacillus sporulation
Caulobacter cell cycle
Myxobacteria fruiting
42Bacillus subtilisTemporally regulated
differentiation
Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
Control of initiation selective gene expression
?
How to makethe decision?
43Bacterial regulation of gene expression
Transcriptional factors
RNAPol
DNA
P
RNA
protein
44Bacterial regulation of gene expression
Transcriptional factors
DNA binding protein
RNAPol
No stimulus
Stimulus
DNA
Binding site
P
No RNA
45Bacterial regulation of gene expression
Transcriptional factors
DNA binding protein
RNAPol
No stimulus
Stimulus
DNA
Binding site
P
No RNA
46Bacterial regulation of gene expression
Transcriptional factors
RNAPol
Spo0A
No stimulus
Stimulus
DNA
Binding site
P
47Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
Control of initiation selective gene expression
Why???
Spores
48Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
Phosphorelay as an integration processing device
?
Spores
- Cell cycle- DNA damage- Nutrient status
49Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
Control of initiation of development
- Integration of signals through signal
transduction
- Centers on phosphorylation of master protein
- DNA binding protein regulates transcription
50Bacillus subtilisTemporally regulated
differentiation
Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
Control of timing by selective gene expression
Set 0
Set II
Set IV
Set V
Set III
51Promoter recognition by sigma factors
Sigma factor
RNA polymerase core enzyme
Figure from Griffiths et al (1996) Introduction
to Genetic Analysis, 6th ed., WH Freeman and Co.
52Promoter recognition by sigma factors
Figure from Griffiths et al (1996) Introduction
to Genetic Analysis, 6th ed., WH Freeman and Co.
53Promoter recognition by sigma factors
Figure from Griffiths et al (1996) Introduction
to Genetic Analysis, 6th ed., WH Freeman and Co.
54Promoter recognition by sigma factors
uvrB Repair DNA damage TTGTTGGCATAATTAAGTACGACGAG
TAAAATTAC ATACCT recA DNArecombination CACTTGAT
ACTGTA.TGAGCATACAGTATAATTGC TTCAACA rrnAB Ribosom
alRNA CTCTTGTCAGGCCG.GAATAACTCCCTATAATGCGCCACCACTG
str Ribosomal protein TTCTTGACACCTT.TCGGCATCGCCCT
AAAATTCG GCGTCG rpoA RNA polymerase TTCTTGCAAAGT
TGGGTTGAGCTGGCTAGATTAGC CAGCCA
55Promoter recognition by sigma factors
TTGaca
TAtAaT R
uvrB Repair DNA damage TTGTTGGCATAATTAAGTACGACGAG
TAAAATTAC ATACCT recA DNArecombination CACTTGAT
ACTGTA.TGAGCATACAGTATAATTGC TTCAACA rrnAB Ribosom
alRNA CTCTTGTCAGGCCG.GAATAACTCCCTATAATGCGCCACCACTG
str Ribosomal protein TTCTTGACACCTT.TCGGCATCGCCCT
AAAATTCG GCGTCG rpoA RNA polymerase TTCTTGCAAAGT
TGGGTTGAGCTGGCTAGATTAGC CAGCCA
Kp nifE nitrogenase accessory CTTCTGGAGCGCGAATTGCA
TCTTCCCCCT Kp nifU nitrogenase accessory
TCTCTGGTATCGCAATTGCT AGTTCGTTAT Kp
nifB nitrogenase accessory CCTCTGGTACAGCATTTGCA
GCAGGAAGGT Kp nifH nitrogenase CGGCTGGTATGTTCCCTGC
ACTTCTCTGCTG Kp nifM nitrogenase accessory
TGGCTGGCCGGAAATTTGCA ATACAGGGAT Kp
nifF nitrogenase accessory AACCTGGCACAGCCTTCGCA
ATACCCCTGC Kp nifL nitrogenase regulatn ATAAGGGCG
CACGGTTTGCATGGTTATCACC glnA P2 glutamine
synthetase AAGTTGGCACAGATTTCGCTTTATCTTTTTT
56Sigma factors in sporulation
HousekeepingSigma-A
Starvation-specificSigma-H
Starvation (and other signals)Stage 0
57Sigma factors in sporulation
Mother cell
Forespore
Mother-specificSigma-E
H
Forespore-specificSigma-F
H
Stage II/III
58Sigma factors in sporulation
Uniform presence of inactive sigma precursors
Starvation (and other signals)Stage 0
59Sigma factors in sporulation
Selective activation of sigma precursors
Active mother-specificSigma-E
H
Active forespore-specificSigma-F
H
Stage II/III
60Sigma factors in sporulation
Cascade of sigma factors
Late mother-specificSigma-K
Late forespore-specificSigma-G
Starvation (and other signals)Stage III
Stage IV
61Sporulation by Bacillus subtilis
Control of timing by selective gene expression
- Determined by specific, active sigma factors
- Presence and activation important
- Activation linked to morphological events
62AnabaenaSpatially regulated differentiation
Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
How to find regulation of pattern?
N2 fixation
63Genetic approach to Cell Biology
64Genetic approach to Cell Biology
65Genetic approach to Cell Biology
66Genetic approach to Cell Biology
67Genetic approach to Cell Biology
68Genetic approach to Cell Biology
69Genetic approach to Cell Biology
70Genetic approach to Cell Biology
71Genetic approach to Cell Biology
Isolation of Defective Gene
72AnabaenaSpatially regulated differentiation
Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
How to find regulation of pattern?
N2 fixation
73AnabaenaSpatially regulated differentiation
Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
How to find regulation of pattern?
Gene expression?
74Gene fusions to monitor expression
75Gene fusions to monitor expression
hetRRegulation
Reporter gene
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNATGNNNNNNNNNN
NNNNNN
NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNTACNNN
NNNNNNNNNNNNN
5-GTA ..(8).. TACNNNNNNNNNNTANNNTNNNNNNNN
NN3-CAT ..(8).. ATGNNNNNNNNNNATNNNANNNNN
NNNNN
RNA Polymerase
GTA ..(8).. TAC
76Detection of hetR gene expression through Green
Fluorescent Protein
The hydromedusa Aequoria victoria Source of
GreenFluorescent Protein
77Expression of hetR during differentiation
Weak and patchy
78Expression of hetR after differentiation
Strong and focused
79Expression of hetR after differentiation
HetR is required for its own induction!
Feedback Induction
Other examples
spo0A
eve
80Feedback Regulation
Stability
All-or-none
81Feedback Regulation
Alan Turings Reaction-Diffusion Model
82Feedback Regulation
Alan Turings Reaction-Diffusion Model
Initiation
Marcelo Walter, U Br Columbia
83Feedback Regulation
Alan Turings Reaction-Diffusion Model
Pattern emerging from random initiation
84Feedback Regulation
Alan Turings Reaction-Diffusion Model
Pattern emerging from random initiation
85Feedback Regulation
Alan Turings Reaction-Diffusion Model
What is the diffusible inhibitor?
86Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
How to find the hypothetical diffusible inhibitor?
Encodes diffusible inhibitor?
87Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
The nature of the hypothetical inhibitor
PatS
MLVNFCDERGSGR
Is PatS the predicted diffusible inhibitor?
88Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
The nature of the hypothetical inhibitor
RGSGR
89Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
The nature of the hypothetical inhibitor
Multiple heterocysts
But not ALL heterocysts
90Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
The nature of the hypothetical inhibitor
Nonrandomspacing
91Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
The nature of the hypothetical inhibitor
Heterocyst distributionis affected
But its not RANDOM
92Heterocyst differentiation by Anabaena
A natural example of the Turing model?
- Differentiation regulated by R-like protein, HetR
- Differentiation regulated by D-like protein, PatS
- Pattern is not completely determined by HetR
and PatS
93Bacterial Development
End result...
much simpler
Anabaena heterocysts
Bacillus sporulation
Caulobacter cell cycle
Myxobacteria fruiting
94How to understand complexity?
95How to understand complexity?
96(No Transcript)