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Of plasticity and specificity: dialectics of the microenvironment and macroenvironment and the organ phenotype
Author(s) -
Bhat Ramray,
Bissell Mina J.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
wiley interdisciplinary reviews: developmental biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1759-7692
pISSN - 1759-7684
DOI - 10.1002/wdev.130
Subject(s) - juxtacrine signalling , biology , organism , function (biology) , microbiology and biotechnology , phenotype , embryonic stem cell , neuroscience , paracrine signalling , genetics , gene , receptor
The study of biological form and how it arises is the domain of the developmental biologists; but once the form is achieved, the organ poses a fascinating conundrum for all the life scientists: how are form and function maintained in adult organs throughout most of the life of the organism? That they do appears to contradict the inherently plastic nature of organogenesis during development. How do cells with the same genetic information arrive at, and maintain such different architectures and functions, and how do they keep remembering that they are different from each other? It is now clear that narratives based solely on genes and an irreversible regulatory dynamics cannot answer these questions satisfactorily, and the concept of microenvironmental signaling needs to be added to the equation. During development, cells rearrange and differentiate in response to diffusive morphogens, juxtacrine signals, and the extracellular matrix ( ECM ). These components, which constitute the modular microenvironment, are sensitive to cues from other tissues and organs of the developing embryo as well as from the external macroenvironment. On the other hand, once the organ is formed, these modular constituents integrate and constrain the organ architecture, which ensures structural and functional homeostasis and therefore, organ specificity. We argue here that a corollary of the above is that once the organ architecture is compromised in adults by mutations or by changes in the microenvironment such as aging or inflammation, that organ becomes subjected to the developmental and embryonic circuits in search of a new identity. But since the microenvironment is no longer embryonic, the confusion leads to cancer: hence as we have argued, tumors become new evolutionary organs perhaps in search of an elusive homeostasis. WIREs Dev Biol 2014, 3:147–163. doi: 10.1002/wdev.130 This article is categorized under: Adult Stem Cells, Tissue Renewal, and Regeneration > Environmental Control of Stem Cells Gene Expression and Transcriptional Hierarchies > Cellular Differentiation Gene Expression and Transcriptional Hierarchies > Regulatory Mechanisms Comparative Development and Evolution > Regulation of Organ Diversity

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