Current Biology
Volume 32, Issue 22, 21 November 2022, Pages 4989-4996.e3
Journal home page for Current Biology

Report
Manipulating the nature of embryonic mitotic waves

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.10.014Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Highlights

  • Sweep waves are observed when cell-cycle progression is fast and synchronous

  • Trigger waves are observed when cell-cycle progression is slow or asynchronous

  • polo and cullin-5 mutants elucidate the transition from sweep to trigger waves

  • Sweep waves are observed across a broad range of temperature

Summary

Early embryogenesis is characterized by rapid and synchronous cleavage divisions, which are often controlled by wave-like patterns of Cdk1 activity. Two mechanisms have been proposed for mitotic waves: sweep and trigger waves.1,2 The two mechanisms give rise to different wave speeds, dependencies on physical and molecular parameters, and spatial profiles of Cdk1 activity: upward sweeping gradients versus traveling wavefronts. Both mechanisms hinge on the transient bistability governing the cell cycle and are differentiated by the speed of the cell-cycle progression: sweep and trigger waves arise for rapid and slow drives, respectively. Here, using quantitative imaging of Cdk1 activity and theory, we illustrate that sweep waves are the dominant mechanism in Drosophila embryos and test two fundamental predictions on the transition from sweep to trigger waves. We demonstrate that sweep waves can be turned into trigger waves if the cell cycle is slowed down genetically or if significant delays in the cell-cycle progression are introduced across the embryo by altering nuclear density. Our genetic experiments demonstrate that Polo kinase is a major rate-limiting regulator of the blastoderm divisions, and genetic perturbations reducing its activity can induce the transition from sweep to trigger waves. Furthermore, we show that changes in temperature cause an essentially uniform slowdown of interphase and mitosis. That results in sweep waves being observed across a wide temperature range despite the cell-cycle durations being significantly different. Collectively, our combination of theory and experiments elucidates the nature of mitotic waves in Drosophila embryogenesis, their control mechanisms, and their mutual transitions.

Keywords

mitotic waves
embryogenesis
cell cycle
bistability
reaction-diffusion equations
Drosophila
temperature
Polo
Cdk1
Cullin-5

Data and code availability

  • All the microscopy data reported in this paper will be shared by the lead contact upon request.

  • All original code has been deposited at Github at the following link and is publicly available as of the date of publication: https://github.com/lhaydene26/Hayden_MitoticWaves2022

  • Any additional information required to reanalyze the data reported in this paper is available from the lead contact upon request.

Cited by (0)

4

Twitter: @ditalialab

5

Lead contact