journal
Journals Annual Review of Cell and Deve...

Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology

https://read.qxmd.com/read/36201299/arcdb-goes-open-in-2023
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ruth Lehmann
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36201298/neurobiology-stem-cell-biology-and-immunology-an-emerging-triad-for-understanding-tissue-homeostasis-and-repair
#22
REVIEW
Emily Scott-Solomon, Ya-Chieh Hsu
The peripheral nervous system (PNS) endows animals with the remarkable ability to sense and respond to a dynamic world. Emerging evidence shows the PNS also participates in tissue homeostasis and repair by integrating local changes with organismal and environmental changes. Here, we provide an in-depth summary of findings delineating the diverse roles of peripheral nerves in modulating stem cell behaviors and immune responses under steady-state conditions and in response to injury and duress, with a specific focus on the skin and the hematopoietic system...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35905769/hitchhiking-across-kingdoms-cotransport-of-cargos-in-fungal-animal-and-plant-cells
#23
REVIEW
Jenna R Christensen, Samara L Reck-Peterson
Eukaryotic cells across the tree of life organize their subcellular components via intracellular transport mechanisms. In canonical transport, myosin, kinesin, and dynein motor proteins interact with cargos via adaptor proteins and move along filamentous actin or microtubule tracks. In contrast to this canonical mode, hitchhiking is a newly discovered mode of intracellular transport in which a cargo attaches itself to an already-motile cargo rather than directly associating with a motor protein itself. Many cargos including messenger RNAs, protein complexes, and organelles hitchhike on membrane-bound cargos...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35850152/tissue-homeostasis-and-non-homeostasis-from-cell-life-cycles-to-organ-states
#24
REVIEW
Lucy Erin O'Brien
Although tissue homeostasis-the steady state-implies stability, our organs are in a state of continual, large-scale cellular flux. This flux underpins an organ's ability to homeostatically renew, to non-homeostatically resize upon altered functional demand, and to return to homeostasis after resizing or injury-in other words, to be dynamic. Here, I examine the basic unit of organ-scale cell dynamics: the cellular life cycle of birth, differentiation, and death. Focusing on epithelial organs, I discuss how spatial patterns and temporal kinetics of life cycle stages depend upon lineage organization and tissue architecture...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35804478/senescence-an-identity-crisis-originating-from-deep-within-the-nucleus
#25
REVIEW
Ioana Olan, Masashi Narita
Cellular senescence is implicated in a wide range of physiological and pathological conditions throughout an organism's entire lifetime. In particular, it has become evident that senescence plays a causative role in aging and age-associated disorders. This is not due simply to the loss of function of senescent cells. Instead, the substantial alterations of the cellular activities of senescent cells, especially the array of secretory factors, impact the surrounding tissues or even entire organisms. Such non-cell-autonomous functionality is largely coordinated by tissue-specific genes, constituting a cell fate-determining state...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35804477/mitochondria-as-cellular-and-organismal-signaling-hubs
#26
REVIEW
Koning Shen, Corinne L Pender, Raz Bar-Ziv, Hanlin Zhang, Kevin Wickham, Elizabeth Willey, Jenni Durieux, Qazi Ahmad, Andrew Dillin
Mitochondria are traditionally known as the powerhouse of the cell, but their functions extend far beyond energy production. They are vital in cellular and organismal pathways that direct metabolism, stress responses, immunity, and cellular fate. To accomplish these tasks, mitochondria have established networks of both intra- and extracellular communication. Intracellularly, these communication routes comprise direct contacts between mitochondria and other subcellular components as well as indirect vesicle transport of ions, metabolites, and other intracellular messengers...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35767872/structural-biology-of-cilia-and-intraflagellar-transport
#27
REVIEW
Nikolai Klena, Gaia Pigino
Cilia are ubiquitous microtubule-based eukaryotic organelles that project from the cell to generate motility or function in cellular signaling. Motile cilia or flagella contain axonemal dynein motors and other complexes to achieve beating. Primary cilia are immotile and act as signaling hubs, with receptors shuttling between the cytoplasm and ciliary compartment. In both cilia types, an intraflagellar transport (IFT) system powered by unique kinesin and dynein motors functions to deliver the molecules required to build cilia and maintain their functions...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35767871/organoid-imaging-seeing-development-and-function
#28
REVIEW
Rashmiparvathi Keshara, Yung Hae Kim, Anne Grapin-Botton
Organoids are miniaturized and simplified versions of an organ produced in vitro from stem or progenitor cells. They are used as a model system consisting of multiple cell types forming an architecture relevant to the organ and carrying out the function of the organ. They are a useful tool to study development, homeostasis, regeneration, and disease. The imaging of organoids has become a pivotal method to visualize and understand their self-organization, symmetry breaking, growth, differentiation, and function...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35759800/how-microtubules-build-the-spindle-branch-by-branch
#29
REVIEW
Sophie M Travis, Brian P Mahon, Sabine Petry
The microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton provides the architecture that governs intracellular organization and the regulated motion of macromolecules through the crowded cytoplasm. The key to establishing a functioning cytoskeletal architecture is regulating when and where new MTs are nucleated. Within the spindle, the vast majority of MTs are generated through a pathway known as branching MT nucleation, which exponentially amplifies MT number in a polar manner. Whereas other MT nucleation pathways generally require a complex organelle such as the centrosome or Golgi apparatus to localize nucleation factors, the branching site is based solely on a simple, preformed MT, making it an ideal system to study MT nucleation...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35609906/biogenesis-and-regulatory-roles-of-circular-rnas
#30
REVIEW
Li Yang, Jeremy E Wilusz, Ling-Ling Chen
Covalently closed, single-stranded circular RNAs can be produced from viral RNA genomes as well as from the processing of cellular housekeeping noncoding RNAs and precursor messenger RNAs. Recent transcriptomic studies have surprisingly uncovered that many protein-coding genes can be subjected to backsplicing, leading to widespread expression of a specific type of circular RNAs (circRNAs) in eukaryotic cells. Here, we discuss experimental strategies used to discover and characterize diverse circRNAs at both the genome and individual gene scales...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35587265/physiological-functions-of-intracellular-protein-degradation
#31
REVIEW
Erik McShane, Matthias Selbach
While cellular proteins were initially thought to be stable, research over the last decades has firmly established that intracellular protein degradation is an active and highly regulated process: Lysosomal, proteasomal, and mitochondrial degradation systems were identified and found to be involved in a staggering number of biological functions. Here, we provide a global overview of the diverse roles of cellular protein degradation using seven categories: homeostasis, regulation, quality control, stoichiometry control, proteome remodeling, immune surveillance, and baseline turnover...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35562854/eukaryotic-cell-size-control-and-its-relation-to-biosynthesis-and-senescence
#32
REVIEW
Shicong Xie, Matthew Swaffer, Jan M Skotheim
The most fundamental feature of cellular form is size, which sets the scale of all cell biological processes. Growth, form, and function are all necessarily linked in cell biology, but we often do not understand the underlying molecular mechanisms nor their specific functions. Here, we review progress toward determining the molecular mechanisms that regulate cell size in yeast, animals, and plants, as well as progress toward understanding the function of cell size regulation. It has become increasingly clear that the mechanism of cell size regulation is deeply intertwined with basic mechanisms of biosynthesis, and how biosynthesis can be scaled (or not) in proportion to cell size...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35562853/adhesion-based-self-organization-in-tissue-patterning
#33
REVIEW
Tony Y-C Tsai, Rikki M Garner, Sean G Megason
Since the proposal of the differential adhesion hypothesis, scientists have been fascinated by how cell adhesion mediates cellular self-organization to form spatial patterns during development. The search for molecular tool kits with homophilic binding specificity resulted in a diverse repertoire of adhesion molecules. Recent understanding of the dominant role of cortical tension over adhesion binding redirects the focus of differential adhesion studies to the signaling function of adhesion proteins to regulate actomyosin contractility...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35512258/motor-cooperation-during-mitosis-and-ciliogenesis
#34
REVIEW
Guangshuo Ou, Jonathan M Scholey
Cilia and mitotic spindles are microtubule (MT)-based, macromolecular machines that consecutively assemble and disassemble during interphase and M phase of the cell cycle, respectively, and play fundamental roles in how eukaryotic cells swim through a fluid, sense their environment, and divide to reproduce themselves. The formation and function of these structures depend on several types of cytoskeletal motors, notably MT-based kinesins and dyneins, supplemented by actin-based myosins, which may function independently or collaboratively during specific steps in the pathway of mitosis or ciliogenesis...
October 6, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35901313/recent-advances-in-ciliate-biology
#35
REVIEW
Rachel A Howard-Till, Usha Pallabi Kar, Amy S Fabritius, Mark Winey
Ciliates are a diverse group of unicellular eukaryotes that vary widely in size, shape, body plan, and ecological niche. Here, we review recent research advances achieved with ciliate models. Studies on patterning and regeneration have been revived in the giant ciliate Stentor , facilitated by modern omics methods. Cryo-electron microscopy and tomography have revolutionized the structural study of complex macromolecules such as telomerase, ribozymes, and axonemes. DNA elimination, gene scrambling, and mating type determination have been deciphered, revealing interesting adaptations of processes that have parallels in other kingdoms of life...
July 28, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35850151/lipid-transport-across-bacterial-membranes
#36
REVIEW
Sabrina I Giacometti, Mark R MacRae, Kristen Dancel-Manning, Gira Bhabha, Damian C Ekiert
The movement of lipids within and between membranes in bacteria is essential for building and maintaining the bacterial cell envelope. Moving lipids to their final destination is often energetically unfavorable and does not readily occur spontaneously. Bacteria have evolved several protein-mediated transport systems that bind specific lipid substrates and catalyze the transport of lipids across membranes and from one membrane to another. Specific protein flippases act in translocating lipids across the plasma membrane, overcoming the obstacle of moving relatively large and chemically diverse lipids between leaflets of the bilayer...
July 18, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35850150/surprises-from-intravital-imaging-of-the-innate-immune-response
#37
REVIEW
Michael Mihlan, Shima Safaiyan, Manuel Stecher, Neil Paterson, Tim Lämmermann
Successful immune responses depend on the spatiotemporal coordination of immune cell migration, interactions, and effector functions in lymphoid and parenchymal tissues. Real-time intravital microscopy has revolutionized our understanding of the dynamic behavior of many immune cell types in the living tissues of several species. Observing immune cells in their native environment has revealed many unanticipated facets of their biology, which were not expected from experiments outside a living organism. Here we highlight both classic and more recent examples of surprising discoveries that critically relied on the use of live in vivo imaging...
July 18, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35804476/morphogenetic-roles-of-hydrostatic-pressure-in-animal-development
#38
REVIEW
Michel Bagnat, Bijoy Daga, Stefano Di Talia
During organismal development, organs and systems are built following a genetic blueprint that produces structures capable of performing specific physiological functions. Interestingly, we have learned that the physiological activities of developing tissues also contribute to their own morphogenesis. Specifically, physiological activities such as fluid secretion and cell contractility generate hydrostatic pressure that can act as a morphogenetic force. Here, we first review the role of hydrostatic pressure in tube formation during animal development and discuss mathematical models of lumen formation...
July 8, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35562852/mechanochemical-principles-of-spatial-and-temporal-patterns-in-cells-and-tissues
#39
REVIEW
Anaïs Bailles, Emily W Gehrels, Thomas Lecuit
Patterns are ubiquitous in living systems and underlie the dynamic organization of cells, tissues, and embryos. Mathematical frameworks have been devised to account for the self-organization of biological patterns, most famously the Turing framework. Patterns can be defined in space, for example, to form stripes; in time, such as during oscillations; or both, to form traveling waves. The formation of these patterns can have different origins: purely chemical, purely mechanical, or a combination of the two. Beyond the variety of molecular implementations of such patterns, we emphasize the unitary principles associated with them, across scales in space and time, within a general mechanochemical framework...
May 13, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35395166/the-plant-anaphase-promoting-complex-cyclosome
#40
REVIEW
Alex Willems, Lieven De Veylder
The anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) represents a large multisubunit E3-ubiquitin ligase complex that controls the unidirectional progression through the cell cycle by the ubiquitination of specific target proteins, marking them for proteasomal destruction. Although the APC/C's role is largely conserved among eukaryotes, its subunit composition and target spectrum appear to be species specific. In this review, we focus on the plant APC/C complex, whose activity correlates with different developmental processes, including polyploidization and gametogenesis...
April 8, 2022: Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
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