PUBLICATION
Mechanistic origins of temperature scaling in the early embryonic cell cycle
- Authors
- Rombouts, J., Tavella, F., Vandervelde, A., Phong, C., Ferrell, J.E., Yang, Q., Gelens, L.
- ID
- ZDB-PUB-250829-1
- Date
- 2025
- Source
- Nature communications 16: 80458045 (Journal)
- Registered Authors
- Yang, Qiong
- Keywords
- none
- MeSH Terms
-
- Cell Cycle*/physiology
- Drosophila/embryology
- Animals
- Xenopus/embryology
- Xenopus laevis/embryology
- Zebrafish/embryology
- Embryo, Nonmammalian*/cytology
- Temperature*
- PubMed
- 40877323 Full text @ Nat. Commun.
Citation
Rombouts, J., Tavella, F., Vandervelde, A., Phong, C., Ferrell, J.E., Yang, Q., Gelens, L. (2025) Mechanistic origins of temperature scaling in the early embryonic cell cycle. Nature communications. 16:80458045.
Abstract
Temperature strongly influences physiological and ecological processes, particularly in ectotherms. While complex physiological rates often follow Arrhenius-like scaling, originally formulated for single reactions, the underlying reasons remain unclear. Here, we examine temperature scaling of the early embryonic cell cycle across six ectothermic species, including Xenopus, Danio rerio, Caenorhabditis, and Drosophila. We find remarkably consistent apparent activation energies (75 ± 7 kJ/mol), corresponding to a Q10 of 2.8 at 20°C. Computational modeling shows that both biphasic scaling in key cell cycle components and mismatches in activation energies across partially rate-determining enzymes can explain the observed approximate Arrhenius behavior and its breakdown at temperature extremes. Experimental data from cycling Xenopus extracts and in vitro assays of individual regulators support both mechanisms. These findings provide mechanistic insights into the biochemical basis of temperature sensitivity and the failure of biological processes at thermal limits.
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