Determining the scale of the Bicoid morphogen gradient


  Inbal Hecht  ,  Wouter-Jan Rappel  ,  Herbert Levine  
Center for Theoretical Biological Physics and Department of Physics, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093

Bicoid is a morphogen that sets up the anterior-posterior axis in early Drosophila embryos. Although the form of the Bicoid profile is consistent with a simple diffusion/degradation model, the observed length scale is much larger than should be expected based on the measured diffusion rate. We studied two possible mechanisms that could, in principle, affect this gradient and, hence, address this disagreement. First, we show that including trapping and release of Bicoid by the nuclei during cleavage cycles does not alter the morphogen length scale. More crucially, the inclusion of

advective transport due to cytoplasmic streaming can have a large effect.

we have built a simple model based on the (limited) experimental data and show that such a flow can lead to a Bicoid profile that is consistent with various experimental features. Specifically, the observed length scale is obtained, a steady profile is established, and improved scaling between embryos of different lengths is demonstrated.

I. Hecht, W.-J. Rappel and H. Levine, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 106, 1710 (2009).