Propagating gene expression fronts in a one-dimensional coupled system of artificial cells

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Abstract

Living systems employ front propagation and spatiotemporal patterns encoded in biochemical reactions for communication, self-organization and computation. Emulating such dynamics in minimal systems is important for understanding physical principles in living cells and in vitro. Here, we report a one-dimensional array of DNA compartments in a silicon chip as a coupled system of artificial cells, offering the means to implement reaction-diffusion dynamics by integrated genetic circuits and chip geometry. Using a bistable circuit we programmed a front of protein synthesis propagating in the array as a cascade of signal amplification and short-range diffusion. The front velocity is maximal at a saddle-node bifurcation from a bistable regime with travelling fronts to a monostable regime that is spatially homogeneous. Near the bifurcation the system exhibits large variability between compartments, providing a possible mechanism for population diversity. This demonstrates that on-chip integrated gene circuits are dynamical systems driving spatiotemporal patterns, cellular variability and symmetry breaking.

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Tayar, A. M., Karzbrun, E., Noireaux, V., & Bar-Ziv, R. H. (2015). Propagating gene expression fronts in a one-dimensional coupled system of artificial cells. Nature Physics, 11(12), 1037–1041. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys3469

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