Ahmadi M, Rudolf H, Mau C, Garcia-Guillen J, El-Sherif E (2026)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2026
Book Volume: 15
Article Number: 062391
Journal Issue: 1
DOI: 10.1242/bio.062391
The ‘French flag’ model has long served as the prevailing framework for explaining how morphogen gradients generate spatial domains during embryonic development. However, recent evidence indicates that many tissues establish patterns by translating the sequential activation of genes into spatial domains. While the sequential nature of this processisbecomingclear,themechanismsthatmediatethese temporal dynamics and translate them into stable spatial boundaries remain debated. Using the gap gene network in the flour beetle Tribolium castaneum [which mediates the regionalization of the anterior-posterior (AP) axis into different axial fates through the regulation of downstream Hox genes] as a model, we combined hybridization chain reaction in situ hybridization, parental RNA interference (RNAi), and computational modeling to dissect these mechanisms. Our high-resolution spatiotemporal analysis indicates that gap genes initially function as a genetic cascade in the posterior growth zone. Specifically, RNAi perturbations reveal that the disruption of upstream genes prevents the initiation of downstream targets in the posterior rather than merely affecting their anterior maintenance. Conversely, the knockdown of downstream repressors leads to the posterior persistence of upstream genes. Furthermore, weinvestigatedtherelationship betweenthisdynamicinitiation phase and anterior maintenance. We observe that in milles-pattes (mlpt) RNAi embryos, the gap gene shavenbaby (svb) fails to propagate anteriorly out of the growth zone, indicating that the anterior maintenance of svb is actively mediated by other genes in the network. Computational simulationsdemonstratethatagenenetwork switching framework, where regulatory interactions reconfigure across the AP axis, successfully reproduces these complex phenotypes. These findings provide definitive spatiotemporal evidence that Tribolium gap gene initialization is driven by a genetic cascade, and support a model in which dynamic network rewiring converts this cascade into stable spatial patterns more anteriorly.
APA:
Ahmadi, M., Rudolf, H., Mau, C., Garcia-Guillen, J., & El-Sherif, E. (2026). Spatiotemporal analysis of genetic perturbations reveals a genetic cascade driving Tribolium gap gene initialization. Biology Open, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1242/bio.062391
MLA:
Ahmadi, Mahla, et al. "Spatiotemporal analysis of genetic perturbations reveals a genetic cascade driving Tribolium gap gene initialization." Biology Open 15.1 (2026).
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