Cell cycle and developmental control of cortical excitability in Xenopus laevis release_ei2nmbjmhvezbecy7piv7eiaqu

by Zachary Swider, ANI VARJABEDIAN, Marcin Leda, Jennifer Landino, Andrew B. Goryachev, A. B. Goryachev, William Bement

Released as a post by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.

2022  

Abstract

Interest in cortical excitability – the ability of the cell cortex to generate traveling waves of protein activity – has grown considerably over the past twenty years. Attributing biological functions to cortical excitability requires an understanding of the natural behavior of excitable waves and the ability to accurately quantify wave properties. Here we have investigated and quantified the onset of cortical excitability in X. laevis eggs and embryos, and the changes in cortical excitability throughout early development. We found that cortical excitability begins to manifest shortly after egg activation. Further, we identified a close relationship between wave properties – such as wave frequency and amplitude – and cell cycle progression as well as cell size. Finally, we identified quantitative differences between cortical excitability in the cleavage furrow relative to non-furrow cortical excitability and showed that these wave regimes are mutually exclusive.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   22.5 MB
file_f5pcqles4jhgjlu7twl4xzvmwy
www.biorxiv.org (repository)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  post
Stage   unknown
Date   2022-02-11
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: 0ae6d704-8864-4231-a6c3-5323ae1d7c9d
API URL: JSON