Origin of directionality
in the fish stripe pattern
Shoji H, Mochizuki A, Iwasa Y, Hirata M, Watanabe T, Hioki S and Kondo
S
Dev Dyn 226(4):627-33 (2003)
SUMMARY
The formation of stripe patterns in animal skin has been explained by the
reaction-diffusion (RD) system, a hypothetical chemical reaction proposed
by A. Turing. Although animal stripes usually have directionality, the
RD model alone cannot explain how the direction is specified. To investigate
the mechanism regulating the direction of stripes, we studied stripe pattern
formation in two species of Genicanthus during sexual conversion. These
species share almost identical morphologic properties, except for their
stripe direction. In both species, spots transiently arise at random positions
and then combine and rearrange to form directional stripes. Computational
analysis has shown that diffusion anisotropy is very effective at specifying
the direction of stripes formed by the RD system. Model simulations reproduce
the transient dynamics of directional pattern formation observed in fish
as well as the resulting stripes. In cases where the magnitude and direction
of diffusion anisotropy of the substances are identical, the resulting
stripes are not directional. However, if they differ, stripes become directional.
As only a small difference in anisotropy is required for this effect,
any kind of structure with directional conformation might cause a marked
change in stripe direction. Scales are the most likely candidate structure
for generating anisotropic interactions in skin.
LINK
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