Journal article
Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, 2016
APA
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Bernadskaya, Y. Y., & Christiaen, L. (2016). Transcriptional Control of Developmental Cell Behaviors. Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology.
Chicago/Turabian
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Bernadskaya, Yelena Y., and L. Christiaen. “Transcriptional Control of Developmental Cell Behaviors.” Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology (2016).
MLA
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Bernadskaya, Yelena Y., and L. Christiaen. “Transcriptional Control of Developmental Cell Behaviors.” Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, 2016.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{yelena2016a,
title = {Transcriptional Control of Developmental Cell Behaviors.},
year = {2016},
journal = {Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology},
author = {Bernadskaya, Yelena Y. and Christiaen, L.}
}
Tissue-specific transcription regulators emerged as key developmental control genes, which operate in the context of complex gene regulatory networks (GRNs) to coordinate progressive cell fate specification and tissue morphogenesis. We discuss how GRNs control the individual cell behaviors underlying complex morphogenetic events. Cell behaviors classically range from mesenchymal cell motility to cell shape changes in epithelial sheets. These behaviors emerge from the tissue-specific, multiscale integration of the local activities of universal and pleiotropic effectors, which underlie modular subcellular processes including cytoskeletal dynamics, cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion, signaling, polarity, and vesicle trafficking. Extrinsic cues and intrinsic cell competence determine the subcellular spatiotemporal patterns of effector activities. GRNs influence most subcellular activities by controlling only a fraction of the effector-coding genes, which we argue is enriched in effectors involved in reading and processing the extrinsic cues to contextualize intrinsic subcellular processes and canalize developmental cell behaviors. The properties of the transcription-cell behavior interface have profound implications for evolution and disease.