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Precise and scalable self-organization in mammalian pseudo-embryos.

Mélody MerleLeah FriedmanCorinne ChureauArmin ShoushtarizadehThomas Gregor
Published in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2024)
Gene expression is inherently noisy, posing a challenge to understanding how precise and reproducible patterns of gene expression emerge in mammals. Here we investigate this phenomenon using gastruloids, a three-dimensional in vitro model for early mammalian development. Our study reveals intrinsic reproducibility in the self-organization of gastruloids, encompassing growth dynamics and gene expression patterns. We observe a remarkable degree of control over gene expression along the main body axis, with pattern boundaries positioned with single-cell precision. Furthermore, as gastruloids grow, both their physical proportions and gene expression patterns scale proportionally with system size. Notably, these properties emerge spontaneously in self-organizing cell aggregates, distinct from many in vivo systems constrained by fixed boundary conditions. Our findings shed light on the intricacies of developmental precision, reproducibility and size scaling within a mammalian system, suggesting that these phenomena might constitute fundamental features of multicellularity.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • single cell
  • rna seq
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • high throughput
  • bone marrow
  • mesenchymal stem cells