RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A damped oscillator imposes temporal order on posterior gap gene expression in Drosophila JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 068072 DO 10.1101/068072 A1 Berta Verd A1 Erik Clark A1 Karl R. Wotton A1 Hilde Janssens A1 Eva Jiménez-Guri A1 Anton Crombach A1 Johannes Jaeger YR 2017 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/11/27/068072.abstract AB Insects determine their body segments in two different ways. Short-germband insects, such as the flour beetle Tribolium castaneum, use a molecular clock to establish segments sequentially. In contrast, long-germband insects, such as the vinegar fly Drosophila melanogaster, determine all segments simultaneously through a hierarchical cascade of gene regulation. Gap genes constitute the first layer of the Drosophila segmentation gene hierarchy, downstream of maternal gradients such as that of Caudal (Cad). We use data-driven mathematical modelling and phase space analysis to show that shifting gap domains in the posterior half of the Drosophila embryo are an emergent property of a robust damped oscillator mechanism, suggesting that the regulatory dynamics underlying long- and short-germband segmentation are much more similar than previously thought. In Tribolium, Cad has been proposed to modulate the frequency of the segmentation oscillator. Surprisingly, our simulations and experiments show that the shift rate of posterior gap domains is independent of maternal Cad levels in Drosophila. Our results suggest a novel evolutionary scenario for the short- to long-germband transition, and help explain why this transition occurred convergently multiple times during the radiation of the holometabolan insects.Author summary Different insect species exhibit one of two distinct modes of determining their body segments during development: they either use a molecular oscillator to position segments sequentially, or they generate segments simultaneously through a hierarchical gene-regulatory cascade. The sequential mode is ancestral, while the simultaneous mode has been derived from it independently several times during evolution. In this paper, we present evidence which suggests that simultaneous segmentation also involves an oscillator in the posterior of the embryo of the vinegar fly, Drosophila melanogaster. This surprising result indicates that both modes of segment determination are much more similar than previously thought. Such similarity provides an important step towards explaining the frequent evolutionary transitions between sequential and simultaneous segmentation.