The struggle of the parts: how competition among organs in the body contributes to morphogenetic robustness

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You might think that all of the normal cells in your body are cooperating with each other. Not counting microbial infections, the occasional carcinogenic defection from the target morphology, mutant cells in your normal brain, or your baby’s cells that colonized you, it might seem that the vast majority of your own cells should be incentivized to cooperate with each other because they share the same genome.

It turns out that this is not the case, and despite their identical genomes, your body is home to cells, tissues, and organs that have not forgotten their roots as individual agents that compete for resources – both metabolic and informational. But I think there’s more to this. Our computational work suggests that evolution sets up artificial scarcity within the body, in order to achieve robust embryogenesis, which may have implications for other large-scale systems composed of agential parts (discussed at the very end of this post).

The concept of competition between organs during development was first outlined in detail in a classic but little-known work by the great developmental biologist Wilhelm Roux called “The Struggle of the Parts” (now finally translated from the German, by David Haig and Richard Bondi).

In this paper, Rick Gawne, Ken McKenna, and I review the data – much of it only known to farmers and livestock breeders, on what happens when you release the competition. One thing that happens is compensatory growth – when certain body parts are removed from the equation, others over-grow – both during embryogenesis and in maturation to adulthood, revealing how their growth was suppressed by the active presence of other tissues. What we know can be summarized as follows:

Basically, both cooperative and competitive interactions between body features (“characters” in the terminology of the field) give rise to the standard anatomy of a given species because limiting resources help coordinate relative growth rates. The cells and tissues are competing for molecules that are used as fuel, but also for informational molecules used as growth signals. Why would this be a useful architecture for an organism? In the case of metabolism, perhaps there’s just not enough food energy to be present in unlimited quantities. But informational molecules are normally used in very tiny concentrations in tissues, and in principle could be made in whatever quantity is needed – why limit those?

Peter Smiley (an undergraduate student in my lab at the time the work was done) and I decided to find out. Does evolution like competition within bodies? We set up an evolutionary computer simulation, of embryonic development driven by cells that have different possible behaviors – this is an example of the digital embryogeny field. In this paper, we describe what happens when evolution has a choice of using competitive interactions or not. In our simulation, embryos were rewarded for growing to specific shapes. Each cell had a genome which would encode policies of how and when it would divide, subject to the availability of permissive signaling molecules. There were a number of reservoirs of molecules the genes could refer to for this permission, some of which were present in limiting (finite) quantities and some of which were unlimited. If a cell had a genome that referred to the infinite reservoir, they could in effect divide whenever they wanted to (assuming the other rules, such as having space to divide into, allowed it). If a cell’s genome referred to a finite reservoir, it could divide as long as that reservoir wasn’t empty (and many other cells could draw from that same reservoir). Cells did not otherwise communicate in any way.

What we found is that evolution effectively selected for genomes relying on finite reservoirs – it specifically forced the cells to compete for a limiting resource, when other, unlimited, resources were present. The analyses below show how the usage of finite reservoirs help the fitness of the virtual embryos.

The infinite reservoir-using embryos routinely had lower fitness than ones who used finite ones (or both). We also found that if we take embryos evolved to use finite reservoirs, and we suddenly make their reservoirs infinite, their fitness drops precipitously:

which shows that they were actively relying on the fact that their reservoirs were limiting, to achieve normal morphogenesis. We also found that the use of finite reservoirs resulted in more consistent development, even though our selection scheme did not reward for that specifically – this consistency showed up “for free”, emergent from the dynamics of competition ensured by limited reservoirs. See here how the variability (vertical axis is the standard deviation over repeats of each embryo’s development) reduces when using finite reservoirs:

So, why are finite reservoirs so useful? How do successful developmental strategies use them? One way to do it is to let evolution choose the size of the limited reservoirs and see how many different sizes it uses. By analyzing different successful embryos that evolved, we found that: 1) one of the strategies is to use finite reservoirs to stop growth at the right time; but, 2) there is more than one strategy used; as often happens, evolution finds many ways to the same goal (which is, by the way, a definition of intelligence by William James). These ranged from harmonic growth with arms that leave only one stem cell exposed (not land-locked by neighbors), at any one time (and thus limiting growth in ways not relying on reservoirs being emptied), to other strategies with a major reliance on finite reservoirs; 3) many of these successful embryos did not use the simple strategy of using 1 reservoir molecule for each cell to be produced (i.e., some successful genomes had reservoirs far smaller than the total # of cells).

One basic point is that finite reservoirs are a way to coordinate – a kind of global register, or stigmergic scratchpad, which allows cell A to be affected by what cell B does, even at large distances, without explicit signaling mechanisms. Limiting resources are a useful coordination mechanism.

We also studied the evolutionary course of specific genes, and the developmental biology of successful embryonic strategies, defining a kind of digital genomics (asking which rules are present in the genomes) vs. transcriptomics (asking which rules are actually activated, in an embryo with a given genome). We found that by the end of evolution, only about 5% of the genome was actually used, to achieve the target anatomy. I’ve not been able to find the corresponding number for biological organisms – what % of the genome do we actually use, in development and maintenance? I’m not sure it’s known.

The basic strategy of using competition to produce fit embryos required very few genes – a small percentage were responsible for most of the jumps in fitness, and was often focused on the finite-reservoir alleles. Moreover, most work during development was done by the physiological/transcriptional level (how the existing genes were used by the cellular automata rules), not the genetic level (the prevalence of finite-reservoir calls in the genomes). For example, once the genome got to 20% use of finite reservoir genes, the actual usage of these by the embryo (how often the embryos activated those genes) had already reached the optimal value of 60%. Development was clearly able to use the genomic hardware in ways optimal for survival.

We could see how the evolutionary dynamics reliably produce organisms that preferentially pit their parts against each other, generating conflict, competition, and artificial scarcity of resources for their components in order to meet the goals of the higher level of organization. Even though evolution could give cells all the resources they need, with no efficiency pressure, instead it preferred the strategy of self-induced limitations of resources and competition. This is important, given the common assumption that evolution can be expected to drive within-agent cooperation: apparently, a system’s goals can sometimes be better satisfied by parts that are in conflict over resources. While we can’t extrapolate this idea carelessly, it’s probably wise to develop caution toward simple schemes that seek to bind active agents into some sort of larger collective. We need to beware of the development of large-scale, hard-to-detect, collective agents which benefit by enforcing unnecessary competition among their members.


Featured image by Midjourney.

26 responses to “The struggle of the parts: how competition among organs in the body contributes to morphogenetic robustness”

  1. Brian P Avatar
    Brian P

    “apparently, a system’s goals can sometimes be better satisfied by parts that are in conflict over resources.”

    Could this be applied to society’s, herds and swarms too?

    1. Mike Levin Avatar
      Mike Levin

      Quite possibly. I didn’t want to extrapolate beyond the data and beyond my expertise, but I think experiments could be done with economics and other group behavior models (if they exist, I don’t know).

      1. Benjamin L Avatar
        Benjamin L

        Definitely. Competition among firms is crucial to making the economy work well.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competition_(economics)#Role_in_market_success

  2. Perry Marshall Avatar

    This is how Amazon works. They set up competing teams to work towards similar goals. A book called “The Bezos Letters” by Steve Anderson describes this.

    Amazon organizes its workforce into autonomous teams which operate on the “two-pizza rule,” meaning they should be small enough to be fed with two pizzas.

    Competing teams are tasked with similar objectives but approach them from different angles and allowed to make decisions independently.

  3. Perry Marshall Avatar

    ….and maybe there’s a “two pizza rule” equivalent for organs in the body????

    1. Mike Levin Avatar
      Mike Levin

      That’s very interesting. I think there’s literally a “minimize the pizza” rule in the body because we evolved under metabolic constraints – whatever you can do with less food needed, that’s best. So all of our cognitive system comes with firmware evolved over a billion years of scarcity pressure. What do we need to do to transcend mentally into a future where (hopefully) energy will be solved once and for all, and we will have to go from the scarcity mindset inherited from our cells and tissues into some other mode?

      1. Perry Marshall Avatar

        RE: Infinite abundance… I believe the well of human desires is bottomless. So let’s say we had a magical device that would channel unlimited energy from a large star 1 billion light years away, so that all of our energy problems were solved.

        I think within 10 years someone would find a way to run out of energy, and a bill would be passed in congress to appropriate 10 more stars, also a billion light years away, to deal with the energy crisis.

        In 2024 we have what in 1994 would have seemed like an unlimited amount of computing power but I can still tell that ChatGPT is giving me a truncated answer or searching Bing because the answer I’d most love to get consumes to many megaflops.

        I still think your question is a super great one. A different way of asking the question would be “How do we convince peoples’ lizard brains that there really is enough to go around?” (which I absolutely do believe to be true). Abundance mentality.

        Paul Pilzer wrote great book about this called Unlimited Wealth where he said the limited resource (whale oil, crude oil, etc) is never the resource. The real resource is ALWAYS ingenuity.

        1. Zach C Avatar
          Zach C

          Just an idea.

          Rather than to convince other people to have abundance mentality,

          might we get further by just, thinking about how the relationship between things that are, at any given time, in abundance or scarcity thinking, might be modulated? Can the space accommodate both? Is there real meaning to having seemingly contradictory things both exist in different spaces?

          The meme about the reptile brain isn’t going to get us very far. People have –real reasons– to have scarcity mentality, to have grief, to have anger, to be pessimistic and defensive. Reptile brain is also capable of ingenuity that may be inaccessible by other selves. Just not always.

      2. Zach C Avatar
        Zach C

        What if, that’s not what happens?

        Instead of energy being solved once and for all, the scarcity moves us, to be different than before?

        What if the only way to avoid collapse is to allow the system to change, but not into an infinite space, but simply, a different paradigm altogether? And what if it’s the relationships that change the space, introduce new reservoirs?

        I don’t believe any living thing is infinite. I think stable metabolisms are the whole point. But it’s also why the relationships of things, change.

      3. David Bloomin Avatar

        It seems like there is always finite energy that can be allocated to infinite potential computations. So I don’t think we’re ever going to leave scarcity behind. I think scarcity is what separates “actual” from “potential” and is deeply baked into the nature of reality. As your post beautifully demonstrates, scarcity is actually the thing that binds subsystems together into one system. Unless two systems are linked via some communication channel, they exist in separate universes. And any communication channel is finite and thus a scarce resource.

  4. Perry Marshall Avatar

    Regarding small numbers of genes driving large amounts of development, I wrote a blog post 9 years go called “The 80/20 of Junk DNA”. The Pareto Principle guarantees that a very small number of parts of a complex system will steer most of its behavior. https://evo2.org/8020-junk-dna/

  5. Perry Marshall Avatar

    Len Bertain introduced a concept called “The 20/120 rule” which says that the top 20% of a system is responsible for 120% of the gains; the middle 60% is static, and just “keeps the lights on”; and the bottom 20% pulls the system backwards.

    The 120% of gains created by the best players are counteracted by the worst players. So it nets out to 100% of what you achieved last year.

    So for example in any company, the top 20% of the products and clients generate 120% of the profit. The bottom 20% lose 20% of the profit, and they’d make more money if they didn’t have those products or customers at all.

    Same is true of employees or grad students. 20% of scientific papers move the field backwards not forwards. 60% achieve nothing. The top 20% generate 120% of the progress.

    Sometimes the bottom side is worse than 20%. Sometimes it’s the 50/150 rule.

    Seldom is any organism better than 10% ie 10/110.

    In business, the only time this usually gets fixed is when there are budget cuts or a recession. I think organisms know this too. For example my understanding is that when we do intermittent fasting, the body sheds mitochondria that are in bad shape.

  6. NiCo Tymmesa Avatar

    A very fascinating & fluid read as always!

    The reservoirs of my imagination found myself playfully projecting a ‘Highlander – There can only be one’ scenario; indeed the story of Connor MacLeod and the finite reservoirs of his embryonic-phase as a mere mortal killed but dead before learning of the infinite reservoir from the immortal realm and the physical dynamics of the secret wars they wage against one another, competing for what is essentially, ultimate control of the infinite stream of consciousness within the collective embodiment!

  7. Benjamin L Avatar
    Benjamin L

    In economics, competition is honesty-inducing: it incentivizes people and firms to send accurate signals about themselves to others. Do you see something similar in these embryos?

    This obviously has a strong economics feel to it, so I will carefully read this paper and the other paper with Peter Smiley.

  8. Zk Avatar
    Zk

    “ We need to beware of the development of large-scale, hard-to-detect, collective agents which benefit by enforcing unnecessary competition among their members”

    What do you mean by unnecessary ? From whose perspective ?

    I thought the competitive state is being set-up/enacted/created by the large-scale agent to get to specific set-points (which rely directly on the competitive conditions)

    So if competition/limited resources is necessary for both the parts & whole to get to the target, why say it’s unnecessary?

    Do you think it’s some kind of dishonest signalling from the large agent, like resource A is not available for part X (even when it is)?

    1. Mike Levin Avatar
      Mike Levin

      What I mean by unnecessary is the difference between “we only have X amount of this resource so we have to make do” vs. “we actually can choose to have infinite X, so that all the parts could have as much as they wanted, but we will instead elect to limit it to a certain value and force all the parts to compete for the limited X”. Yes, evolution makes the embryos use finite (limited) reservoirs when it could just as easily have chosen the infinite-capacity ones. Once evolution chose this strategy, yes, we show it is necessary to complete morphogenesis. But it didn’t have to – there are other ways to do it, they’re just harder to find so evolution prefers this. We have more forethought so can actually choose another strategy and avoid the artificial scarcity.

      1. Zk Avatar
        Zk

        Ah! Thank you!

        To rephrase, hope I got this right

        potentially “just as goal-focused” (for higher-scale) but less restraining (lower-scale have infinite resources) strategies could be pursued
        but do require
        “forethought” (either on the part of the higher-scale or lower-scale … or perhaps a negotiation…): a certain kind of agency, syncing, alignment, testing, experimenting etc.

        The higher-scale elects to do this presumably
        balancing the profile of its goals vs. Bandwidth forethought

        1. zk Avatar
          zk

          i somehow feel (but not confident) that the ‘artificial scarcity” may have another function …

          like say a part grows/stops in
          artificial scarcity strategy vs. unlimited resource strategy …

          in a certain sense there could be “more learning/teaching” going on in the first strategy …

  9. Benjamin L Avatar
    Benjamin L

    This passage from the paper is eye-catching.

    > From a broader organismal standpoint, development is essentially a series of decisions about when and where to allocate the energetic fuels and information-carrying signaling molecules needed to initiate growth.

    Economics is often defend as the study of the allocation of scarce resources. I’ll be very surprised if there’s no useful way of applying economic analysis to the study of biological development.

    1. Benjamin L Avatar
      Benjamin L

      defined*, not defend

  10. Benjamin L Avatar
    Benjamin L

    This also stuck out to me:

    > This is because we often conceive of development as a pre-programmed unfurling of instructions encoded in the genome.

    This is very similar to what was thought about motor behavior prior to the discoveries of people like Esther Thelen. It was believed that phenomena such as the development of walking in infants was determined by a preprogrammed set of genetic instructions. Today we know that isn’t true.

    I’m working on a paper that invokes an analogy between cognition and motor behavior, citing your TAME paper as precedence. It seems intuitive that there’s a clear analogy between motor behavior and morphogenesis, as both involve the dynamic coordination of a system of parts to robustly navigate a space of possibilities relating to the way the parts of the system are arranged with respect to each other. But I haven’t turned up much of anything in the literature in this regard. Do you know of anyone who’s drawn an explicit comparison between motor behavior and morphogenesis?

    Here’s a summary of Thelen’s work. https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1995-20907-001

    1. Benjamin L Avatar
      Benjamin L

      In fact, I could probably write a paper on the similarities between Thelen’s work and yours, if any journal were interested in such a thing.

  11. Benjamin L Avatar
    Benjamin L

    I apologize for the multiple comments, but there’s many things I find interesting about this new paper. One passage in particular felt like it was “just economics”, albeit done with biology verbiage. Here is that passage and my translation of it, no indentation.

    Original passage:

    First, the growth factors that drive morphogenesis are almost always present in circumscribed quantities. Even in times of abundance, most organisms can only hope to cull a finite amount of resources from the external environment, for example, due to “patchy” distribution patterns of food sources, and likewise, in all of the systems that have been analyzed to date, the information-carrying molecules that stimulate growth have been found to be limited in number. Second, there is an opportunity cost associated with the deployment of these resources. When an amino acid, lipid, or other macromolecule is used to construct one character, it is generally not available for use elsewhere in the body, and something similar can be said of signaling morphogens. If a ligand binds to a membrane receptor of one cell, it cannot simultaneously bind to another. The fact that growth factors are scarce, and can only be “spent” once, helps to explain why organisms employ morphogenetic mechanisms that specifically function to regulate their distribution. Finally, we point out that coupling growth to a finite resource enables that parameter to be used as an environmental signal through which the subsystems that depend upon it can communicate. A limitless resource bears no information about how much of it was used by other subsystems, but a limited resource can transmit information to each coupled tissue or organ, which indicates how active the others have been. This allows evolution to outsource some system-level control to this dynamic, instead of evolving specific communication mechanisms that act directly between organs.

    Translated version to economics:

    First, the resources that drive economic growth are almost always present in circumscribed quantities. Even in times of abundance, most economies can only hope to cull a finite amount of resources from their, for example, due to “patchy” distribution patterns of coal deposits, and likewise, in all of the systems that have been analyzed to date, the capital that stimulates growth has been found to be limited in number. Second, there is an opportunity cost associated with the deployment of these resources.When a unit of iron is used to construct a piece of rail, it is generally not available for use elsewhere in the economy, and something similar can be said of signals of profit opportunities. If capital is organized in pursuit of one growth opportunity, it cannot be organized in pursuit of another. The fact that resources are scarce, and can only be “spent” once, helps to explain why economies employ regulatory mechanisms that specifically function to regulate their distribution. Finally, we point out that coupling growth to a finite resource enables that parameter to be used as an economic signal through which the subsystems that depend upon it can communicate. A limitless resource bears no information about how much of it was used by other subsystems, but a limited resource can transmit information to each coupled firm or consumer, which indicates how active the others have been. This allows economic development to outsource some system-level control to this dynamic, instead of developing specific communication mechanisms that act directly between firms.

    1. Rik Lubking Avatar
      Rik Lubking

      Any self-organising system evolved via similar pressures and constraints can be expected to exhibit the same abstract game-theoretical dynamics in terms of its in-group and out/between-group relationships (where out/between-group includes the environment as well as other systems).

      So, you’re seeing abstract patterns that can be applied at many different scales and in different substrates, potentially fractally.

      Economics is a good fit, the same patterns may also apply to things like neurology/psychology, sociology/politics, linguistics/language, and so on.

      The zeroth law of thermodynamics also comes to mind (if two thermodynamic systems are both in thermal equilibrium with a third system, then the two systems are in thermal equilibrium with each other.).

      Cheers.

  12. Rik Lubking Avatar
    Rik Lubking

    Here’s a funny thought:

    You can only model the unknown using the known.

    So, when modelling say political ideologies, we need an example of a system that handles resource gathering, distribution and waste disposal.

    Using our own anatomy, that’d be either the respiratory system (lungs, air) or the digestive system (stomach/intestine, food and water).

    Which, if you think about things in abstract/archetypal terms, seem to correspond to working and eating, abundance and scarcity, purifying and burning, heaven and hell, conservative and progressive, christianity and buddhism (west and east), and so on.

    In which case, competition between organs exists not just inside the body, but on the level of psychology and sociology, as well.

    I could explain in more detail, but it’s much funnier to figure out the similarities for yourself. Perhaps Dr. Solms might find it amusing as well.

    In any case, wonderful work as always, cheers.

  13. Horius Parry Avatar

    It seems to me that in order for biology to work we must have a coordinated and distributed signalling system, in other words a bio-field. The field will need some input of energy to keep it going and to enable transmission of information.

    We need a suitable medium within the scope of known physicsal principles.

    The field will be a scalar wave network as described by Konstantin Meyl in his book ‘Scalar Waves’. It will transduce solar neutrinos as an ever present energy supply. Hexagonal rings on bio-molecules eg ATP will host a stable toroidal energy field that can transmit information and will be replenished by neutrino capture.

    The electromagnetic field from the rest of the molecule modulates this field to give some molecules (hormones) very specific signalling properties.

    The sense of smell is a direct input of scalar waves (Meyl)
    The brain is a scalar wave computer.
    Scalar waves are conducted in the insulating materiel of the myelin sheath.
    Inheritance is via the passing on of a scalar wave complex – see Telegony

    Meyl has re-formulated the structure of molecules in terms of electromagnetic fields only, which makes all this credible
    https://library-of-atlantis.com/2024/01/20/atomic-structure-meyl/

    Life forms a continuum from the most fundamental particles all the way up the scales of size, functionality and complexity, to a complete organism and even further to entire ecosystems.
    https://library-of-atlantis.com/2024/03/09/the-origins-of-life/

    The creation of DNA is spontaneous and arises from the bio-field itself
    https://library-of-atlantis.com/2024/04/14/stefan-lanka-on-dna/

    Scalar Waves: https://avalonlibrary.net/Nikola_Tesla/Books/Meyl%20-%20Scalar%20Waves%20(First%20Tesla%20Physics%20Textbook).pdf

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