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Cell Adhesion as a Basis of Pattern in Embryonic Development
Authors:EDELMAN  GERALD M; GALLIN  WARREN J
Institution:Laboratory of Developmental and Molecular Biology, The Rockefeller University New York, New York 10021
Abstract:The development of the modern methodologies of cell biologyin the fifties and sixties and of molecular biology in the seventiesand eighties has led to a reductionist view of embryonic developmentthat centers on the cell and the gene as the functional unitsof development. The functional units in most inductive and morphogeneticprocesses in the embryo are not single cells, however, but ratherare collectives of interacting cells that give rise to the tissuesand organs. Can these methodological developments reconcilea molecular analysis with the fact that form arises epigeneticallyfrom the increasing number of embryonic cells during development?To answer this question one must link genetic regulation tomechanochemical processes that coordinate cell division, cellmovement and cell death. Recent studies of cell adhesion suggestthat one such link is provided by cell adhesion molecules (CAMs)that mediate cell-cell binding. These studies suggest that CAMsare involved in defining cell collectives and their bordersas they interact during inductive events in morphogenesis. AlthoughCAMs cannot be considered the "cause" of induction, they playkey roles among the complex causal chains of inductive interactionsinvolving hormones and growth-factors, extracellular matrixcomponents and cellular receptors. We provide here a brief summaryof modern developments in the field centered about the functionof CAMs in morphogenesis and using recent experimental resultsin the developing feather as a paradigmatic example.
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