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Main Authors: Hanauer, Christian, Palavalli, Amrutha, An, Baiqun, Ilker, Efe, Rink, Jochen C., Jülicher, Frank
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.11182
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author Hanauer, Christian
Palavalli, Amrutha
An, Baiqun
Ilker, Efe
Rink, Jochen C.
Jülicher, Frank
author_facet Hanauer, Christian
Palavalli, Amrutha
An, Baiqun
Ilker, Efe
Rink, Jochen C.
Jülicher, Frank
contents The growth and scaling of organs is a fundamental aspect of animal development. However, how organs grow to the right size and shape required by physiological demands, remains largely unknown. Here, we provide a framework combining theory and experiment to study the scaling of branched organs. As a biological model, we focus on the branching morphogenesis of the planarian gut, which is a highly branched organ responsible for the delivery of nutrients. Planarians undergo massive body size changes requiring gut morphology to adapt to these size variations. Our experimental analysis shows that various gut properties scale with organism size according to power laws. We introduce a theoretical framework to understand the growth and scaling of branched organs. Our theory considers the dynamics of the interface between organ and surrounding tissue to be controlled by a morphogen and illustrates how a shape instability of this interface can give rise to the self-organized formation and growth of complex branched patterns. Considering the reaction-diffusion dynamics in a growing domain representative of organismal growth, we show that a wide range of scaling behaviors of the branching pattern emerges from the interplay between interface dynamics and organism growth. Our model can recapitulate the scaling laws of planarian gut morphology that we quantified and also opens new directions for understanding allometric scaling laws in various other branching systems in organisms.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_11182
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Model for Self-Organized Growth, Branching, and Allometric Scaling of the Planarian Gut
Hanauer, Christian
Palavalli, Amrutha
An, Baiqun
Ilker, Efe
Rink, Jochen C.
Jülicher, Frank
Biological Physics
Soft Condensed Matter
The growth and scaling of organs is a fundamental aspect of animal development. However, how organs grow to the right size and shape required by physiological demands, remains largely unknown. Here, we provide a framework combining theory and experiment to study the scaling of branched organs. As a biological model, we focus on the branching morphogenesis of the planarian gut, which is a highly branched organ responsible for the delivery of nutrients. Planarians undergo massive body size changes requiring gut morphology to adapt to these size variations. Our experimental analysis shows that various gut properties scale with organism size according to power laws. We introduce a theoretical framework to understand the growth and scaling of branched organs. Our theory considers the dynamics of the interface between organ and surrounding tissue to be controlled by a morphogen and illustrates how a shape instability of this interface can give rise to the self-organized formation and growth of complex branched patterns. Considering the reaction-diffusion dynamics in a growing domain representative of organismal growth, we show that a wide range of scaling behaviors of the branching pattern emerges from the interplay between interface dynamics and organism growth. Our model can recapitulate the scaling laws of planarian gut morphology that we quantified and also opens new directions for understanding allometric scaling laws in various other branching systems in organisms.
title A Model for Self-Organized Growth, Branching, and Allometric Scaling of the Planarian Gut
topic Biological Physics
Soft Condensed Matter
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.11182