prepatterning
Prepatterning is the establishment of spatial information within a developing tissue before or at the early stages of pattern formation, effectively delineating regions of future gene expression and morphology. It sets axes, territories, or competence states that shape subsequent morphogenesis. Prepatterns arise from intrinsic factors such as maternal determinants and lineage history, as well as from early signaling gradients, transcriptional networks, and mechanical cues that bias cell fates even before explicit morphogen patterns emerge.
Mechanistically, prepatterning often involves asymmetric distribution of factors in the embryo, differential receptor expression, or chromatin
Examples include many animal embryos, where maternal effect genes create initial anterior-posterior or dorsal-ventral biases; in
Importance and approaches: understanding prepatterning helps explain how reliable patterns emerge despite biological noise and how