A reader has written in, amazed at the speed and complexity of her baby's heart development in utero. How do we go from a single cell to a foetus with a heart, brain, kidneys and lungs in just eight weeks, all of it packed into a human embryo the size of a lentil?
The short answer is "genes", so let's expand on that for a better understanding.
Genes provide the blueprint for how we should develop. We start as a single cell the size of a grain of sand, but because of the key concept of "exponential growth" we don't stay that small for long. One cell splits into two, two into four, four into eight ... The first couple of cell divisions are slow but this soon ramps up to warp speed.
In adults, we're producing about two million new red blood cells each minute. Cell division in the embryo also happens at astronomically fast rates. Exponential growth explains the remarkable speed at which an embryo grows.
But trillions of cells reproducing furiously require a traffic cop to co-ordinate them. It is genes that co-ordinate this explosive growth, dictating what proteins are made, which cells are formed, and which cells go where.