Cinquin Olivier
Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin - Madison, 433 Babcock Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Mech Dev. 2007 Aug;124(7-8):501-17. doi: 10.1016/j.mod.2007.06.004. Epub 2007 Jun 15.
The segmentation of vertebrate embryos depends on a complex genetic network that generates highly dynamic gene expression. Many of the elements of the network have been identified, but their interaction and their influence on segmentation remain poorly understood. A few mathematical models have been proposed to explain the dynamics of subsets of the network, but the mechanistic bases remain controversial. This review focuses on outstanding problems with the generation of somitogenesis clock oscillations, and the ways they could regulate segmentation. Proposals that oscillations are generated by a negative feedback loop formed by Lunatic fringe and Notch signaling are weighed against a model based on positive feedback, and the experimental basis for models of simple negative feedback involving Her/Hes genes or Wnt targets is evaluated. Differences are then made explicit between the many 'clock and wavefront' model variants that have been proposed to explain how the clock regulates segmentation. An understanding of the somitogenesis clock will require addressing experimentally the many questions that arise from the study of simple models.
脊椎动物胚胎的分割依赖于一个复杂的基因网络,该网络产生高度动态的基因表达。该网络的许多元件已被识别,但它们之间的相互作用以及对分割的影响仍知之甚少。已经提出了一些数学模型来解释该网络子集的动态,但其机制基础仍存在争议。本综述聚焦于体节发生时钟振荡产生的突出问题,以及它们调节分割的方式。由“疯狂边缘”(Lunatic fringe)和Notch信号形成的负反馈环产生振荡的提议,与基于正反馈的模型进行了权衡,并评估了涉及Her/Hes基因或Wnt靶标的简单负反馈模型的实验基础。然后明确了为解释时钟如何调节分割而提出的许多“时钟和波阵面”模型变体之间的差异。对体节发生时钟的理解需要通过实验解决简单模型研究中出现的诸多问题。