On the Molecular Mechanisms Regulating Animal Cell Size Homeostasis

Publication date: Available online 20 February 2020Source: Trends in GeneticsAuthor(s): Evgeny Zatulovskiy, Jan M. SkotheimCell size is fundamental to cell physiology because it sets the scale of intracellular geometry, organelles, and biosynthetic processes. In animal cells, size homeostasis is controlled through two phenomenologically distinct mechanisms. First, size-dependent cell cycle progression ensures that smaller cells delay cell cycle progression to accumulate more biomass than larger cells prior to cell division. Second, size-dependent cell growth ensures that larger and smaller cells grow slower per unit mass than more optimally sized cells. This decade has seen dramatic progress in single-cell technologies establishing the diverse phenomena of cell size control in animal cells. Here, we review this recent progress and suggest pathways forward to determine the underlying molecular mechanisms.
Source: Trends in Genetics - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Source Type: research
More News: Genetics | Physiology