Size adaptation of Turing prepatterns (Q1095059)

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Size adaptation of Turing prepatterns
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    Size adaptation of Turing prepatterns (English)
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    1988
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    Spontaneous pattern formation may arise in biological systems as primary and secondary bifurcations to nonlinear parabolic partial differential equations describing chemical reaction-diffusion systems. Such Turing prepatterns have a specified geometry as long as \(D/R^ 2\) (the diffusion coefficient of the morphogen D divided by the square of a characteristic length) is confined to a (usually) limited interval. As real biochemical systems like cleaving eggs or early embryos vary considerably in size, Turing prepatterns are unable to maintain a specified prepattern-geometry, unless \(D/R^ 2\) is varied as well. We show, that actual biochemical control systems may vary \(D_{app}/R^ 2\), where \(D_{app}(k)\) is an apparent diffusion constant, dependent on enzyme regulated rate constants, and that such simple control systems allow Turing structures to adapt to size variations of at least a factor \(10^ 3\) (linearly), not only in large connected cell systems, but in single cells as well.
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    mitosis
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    positional information
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    morphogenesis
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    Spontaneous pattern formation
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    chemical reaction-diffusion systems
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    Turing prepatterns
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    biochemical control systems
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    enzyme regulated rate constants
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