Review
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 5, 220-231 (March 2004) | doi:10.1038/nrm1332
Parsing the Polarity Code
Ian G. Macara1 About the author
Abstract
Cell polarization is used both to mediate physical fates, as, for example, in orientated cell migration, and to specify differential phenotypic fates, as in the asymmetric division of stem cells. Strikingly, the same sets of conserved proteins are used throughout the Metazoa for these purposes. The PAR proteins organize cell polarization in many contexts, and the PINS proteins control the orientation of mitosis. These proteins seem to function as components of a self-organizing network, and an important goal is to decode — or parse — the molecular language of this network.
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Author affiliations
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Center for Cell Signaling, Department of Microbiology, University of Virginia, Health Sciences Center, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908-0577, USA.
Email: igm9c@virginia.edu
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