| Literature DB >> 23345812 |
D Dormann1, B Vasiev, C J Weijer.
Abstract
The organisation and form of most organisms is generated during theirembryonic development and involves precise spatial and temporal controlof cell division, cell death, cell differentiation and cell movement.Differential cell movement is a particularly important mechanism in thegeneration of form. Arguably the best understood mechanism of directedmovement is chemotaxis. Chemotaxis plays a major role in the starvationinduced multicellular development of the social amoebae Dictyostelium.Upon starvation up to 10(5) individual amoebae aggregate to form afruiting body. In this paper we review the evidence that the movement ofthe cells during all stages of Dictyostelium development is controlled bypropagating waves of cAMP which control the chemotactic movement ofthe cells. We analyse the complex interactions between cell-cell signallingresulting in cAMP waves of various geometries and cell movement whichresults in a redistribution of the signalling sources and therefore changes thegeometry of the waves. We proceed to show how the morphogenesis,including aggregation stream and mound formation, slug formation andmigration, of this relatively simple organism is beginning to be understoodat the level of rules for cell behaviour, which can be tested experimentallyand theoretically by model calculations.Entities:
Keywords: cell sorting; chemotaxis; modelling; morphogenesis; signal relay; wave propagation
Year: 2002 PMID: 23345812 PMCID: PMC3456464 DOI: 10.1023/A:1021259326918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Phys ISSN: 0092-0606 Impact factor: 1.365