Noise drives sharpening of gene expression boundaries in the zebrafish hindbrain

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Abstract

Morphogens provide positional information for spatial patterns of gene expression during development. However, stochastic effects such as local fluctuations in morphogen concentration and noise in signal transduction make it difficult for cells to respond to their positions accurately enough to generate sharp boundaries between gene expression domains. During development of rhombomeres in the zebrafish hindbrain, the morphogen retinoic acid (RA) induces expression of hoxb1a in rhombomere 4 (r4) and krox20 in r3 and r5. Fluorescent in situ hybridization reveals rough edges around these gene expression domains, in which cells co-express hoxb1a and krox20 on either side of the boundary, and these sharpen within a few hours. Computational analysis of spatial stochastic models shows, surprisingly, that noise in hoxb1a/krox20 expression actually promotes sharpening of boundaries between adjacent segments. In particular, fluctuations in RA initially induce a rough boundary that requires noise in hoxb1a/krox20 expression to sharpen. This finding suggests a novel noise attenuation mechanism that relies on intracellular noise to induce switching and coordinate cellular decisions during developmental patterning. © 2012 EMBO and Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.

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Zhang, L., Radtke, K., Zheng, L., Cai, A. Q., Schilling, T. F., & Nie, Q. (2012). Noise drives sharpening of gene expression boundaries in the zebrafish hindbrain. Molecular Systems Biology, 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/msb.2012.45

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