Nejvíce citovaný článek - PubMed ID 28413340
History dependence and the continuum approximation breakdown: the impact of domain growth on Turing's instability
Symmetry-breaking instabilities play an important role in understanding the mechanisms underlying the diversity of patterns observed in nature, such as in Turing's reaction-diffusion theory, which connects cellular signalling and transport with the development of growth and form. Extensive literature focuses on the linear stability analysis of homogeneous equilibria in these systems, culminating in a set of conditions for transport-driven instabilities that are commonly presumed to initiate self-organisation. We demonstrate that a selection of simple, canonical transport models with only mild multistable non-linearities can satisfy the Turing instability conditions while also robustly exhibiting only transient patterns. Hence, a Turing-like instability is insufficient for the existence of a patterned state. While it is known that linear theory can fail to predict the formation of patterns, we demonstrate that such failures can appear robustly in systems with multiple stable homogeneous equilibria. Given that biological systems such as gene regulatory networks and spatially distributed ecosystems often exhibit a high degree of multistability and nonlinearity, this raises important questions of how to analyse prospective mechanisms for self-organisation.
- Klíčová slova
- Multistability, Pattern formation, Turing instabilities,
- MeSH
- biologické modely MeSH
- difuze MeSH
- ekosystém * MeSH
- genové regulační sítě MeSH
- matematické pojmy * MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
In the nearly seven decades since the publication of Alan Turing's work on morphogenesis, enormous progress has been made in understanding both the mathematical and biological aspects of his proposed reaction-diffusion theory. Some of these developments were nascent in Turing's paper, and others have been due to new insights from modern mathematical techniques, advances in numerical simulations and extensive biological experiments. Despite such progress, there are still important gaps between theory and experiment, with many examples of biological patterning where the underlying mechanisms are still unclear. Here, we review modern developments in the mathematical theory pioneered by Turing, showing how his approach has been generalized to a range of settings beyond the classical two-species reaction-diffusion framework, including evolving and complex manifolds, systems heterogeneous in space and time, and more general reaction-transport equations. While substantial progress has been made in understanding these more complicated models, there are many remaining challenges that we highlight throughout. We focus on the mathematical theory, and in particular linear stability analysis of 'trivial' base states. We emphasize important open questions in developing this theory further, and discuss obstacles in using these techniques to understand biological reality. This article is part of the theme issue 'Recent progress and open frontiers in Turing's theory of morphogenesis'.
- Klíčová slova
- linear instability analysis, pattern formation, reaction–diffusion systems,
- MeSH
- biologické modely * MeSH
- difuze MeSH
- matematika MeSH
- morfogeneze MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- přehledy MeSH