Mesenchymal-to-epithelial
transition during somitic segmentation: a novel approach to studying the
roles of Rho family GTPases in morphogenesis
Takahashi Y, Sato Y, Suetsugu R and Nakaya Y
Cells Tissues Organs 179(1-2):36-42 (2005)
SUMMARY
During early development in vertebrates, cells change their shapes dramatically
both from epithelial to mesenchymal and also from mesenchymal to epithelial,
enabling the body to form complex tissues and organs. Using somitogenesis
as a novel model, Rho family GTPases have recently been shown to play
essential and differential roles in individual cell behaviors in actual
developing embryos. Levels of Cdc42 activity provide a binary switch wherein
high Cdc42 levels allow the cells to remain mesenchymal, while low Cdc42
levels produce epithelialization. Rac1 activity needs to be precisely
controlled for proper epithelialization through the bHLH transcription
factor Paraxis. Somitogenesis is expected to serve as an excellent model
with which one can understand how the functions of developmental genes
are resolved into the morphogenetic behavior of individual cells.
LINK
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=15942191