Cellular responses to extracellular guidance cues |
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Authors: | Anastacia Berzat Alan Hall |
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Affiliation: | Memorial Sloan‐Kettering Cancer Center, Cell Biology Program, New York, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | Extracellular guidance cues have a key role in orchestrating cell behaviour. They can take many forms, including soluble and cell‐bound ligands (proteins, lipids, peptides or small molecules) and insoluble matrix substrates, but to act as guidance cues, they must be presented to the cell in a spatially restricted manner. Cells that recognize such cues respond by activating intracellular signal transduction pathways in a spatially restricted manner and convert the extracellular information into intracellular polarity. Although extracellular cues influence a broad range of cell polarity decisions, such as mitotic spindle orientation during asymmetric cell division, or the establishment of apical–basal polarity in epithelia, this review will focus specifically on guidance cues that promote cell migration (chemotaxis), or localized cell shape changes (chemotropism). |
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Keywords: | chemotaxis chemotropism guidance cue polarity |
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