Stationary Patterns in a Two-Protein Reaction-Diffusion
System
Posted on 2018-12-20 - 00:00
Patterns
formed by reaction-diffusion mechanisms are crucial for
the development or sustenance of most organisms in nature. Patterns
include dynamic waves, but are more often found as static distributions,
such as animal skin patterns. Yet, a simplistic biological model system
to reproduce and quantitatively investigate static reaction-diffusion
patterns has been missing so far. Here, we demonstrate that the Escherichia coli Min system, known for its oscillatory behavior
between the cell poles, is under certain conditions capable of transitioning
to quasi-stationary protein distributions on membranes closely resembling
Turing patterns. We systematically titrated both proteins, MinD and
MinE, and found that removing all purification tags and linkers from
the N-terminus of MinE was critical for static patterns to occur.
At small bulk heights, dynamic patterns dominate, such as in rod-shaped
microcompartments. We see implications of this work for studying pattern
formation in general, but also for creating artificial gradients as
downstream cues in synthetic biology applications.
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Glock, Philipp; Ramm, Beatrice; Heermann, Tamara; Kretschmer, Simon; Schweizer, Jakob; Mücksch, Jonas; et al. (2019). Stationary Patterns in a Two-Protein Reaction-Diffusion
System. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssynbio.8b00415