How does a developing tissue know how much to grow and when to stop? On p. 1884, Marcos Gonzalez-Gaitan and colleagues address this question using the Drosophila eye as a model. This study follows their earlier work proposing a temporal model for growth control in the wing, whereby cells divide when the levels of Decapentaplegic (Dpp) signalling increase by a defined percentage. In the eye, spatial growth patterns are very different from those in the wing, and growth is partially dependent on a Dpp gradient, the source of which – the morphogenetic furrow – moves as development progresses. The authors find that, as in the wing, the signal gradient scales with tissue size – which grows and then shrinks with the progression of the furrow. They then show that their temporal model is quantitatively consistent with observed patterns of proliferation in wild-type and in various mutant conditions. Intriguingly, they also show that the Dpp-independent component of growth control can be explained by a temporal model – implying a similar cellular response to a different signalling gradient. Thus, a model of tissue growth that involves cells dividing in response to defined increases in signalling levels may be applicable across multiple tissues and multiple signalling inputs.
On growth and gradients
On growth and gradients. Development 1 May 2014; 141 (9): e0903. doi:
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