In 1952, the mathematician Alan Turing published a paper explaining how biological systems could spontaneously create patterns simply through the interactions of different molecules. Although it took many decades for Turingâs idea to be proved right, we now know that these patterning processes are involved in many parts of life, from creating the stripes on a fishâs body to shaping the parts of a developing embryo. To find out more about how these patterns work, researchers have used genetic engineering techniques to create âdesignerâ bacteria. The bacterial colonies seen in this image should just grow as regular circles, but instead they generate these flower-like structures due to the kinds of Turing patterns that would normally be seen in more complex systems like fruit flies or even humans. These designer bugs offer a new way to study how patterns and structures are created in living organisms, including within our own bodies.
Image from work by Salva Duran-Nebreda and colleagues, Ricard SolĂŠ lab
Institut de Biologia Evolutiva (CSIC-UPF), Barcelona, Spain
Image copyright held by the original authors
Research published in ACS Synthetic Biology, January 2021
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