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Publication : Species-specific segmentation clock periods are due to differential biochemical reaction speeds.

First Author  Matsuda M Year  2020
Journal  Science Volume  369
Issue  6510 Pages  1450-1455
PubMed ID  32943519 Mgi Jnum  J:297638
Mgi Id  MGI:6456944 Doi  10.1126/science.aba7668
Citation  Matsuda M, et al. (2020) Species-specific segmentation clock periods are due to differential biochemical reaction speeds. Science 369(6510):1450-1455
abstractText  Although mechanisms of embryonic development are similar between mice and humans, the time scale is generally slower in humans. To investigate these interspecies differences in development, we recapitulate murine and human segmentation clocks that display 2- to 3-hour and 5- to 6-hour oscillation periods, respectively. Our interspecies genome-swapping analyses indicate that the period difference is not due to sequence differences in the HES7 locus, the core gene of the segmentation clock. Instead, we demonstrate that multiple biochemical reactions of HES7, including the degradation and expression delays, are slower in human cells than they are in mouse cells. With the measured biochemical parameters, our mathematical model accounts for the two- to threefold period difference between the species. We propose that cell-autonomous differences in biochemical reaction speeds underlie temporal differences in development between species.
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