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Cell Commitment and Differentiation
This book is about how cells differentiate; it describes the way in which cells in animal and plant bodies take on their specialised fates.
Norman Maclean (Author), Brian Keith Hall (Author)
9780521349642, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 13 August 1987
256 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm, 0.38 kg
First published in 1987, this book is about how cells differentiate; that is it describes the way in which cells in animal and plant bodies take on their specialised fates. It has long been recognised that since all such cells retain copies of all genes, the genetic explanation for tissue differences lies in the controlled expression of restricted sets of genes. But how is the choice made and how are such restricted groups of genes activated and regulated? This book discusses these questions and describes both determination and differentiation. The mechanisms that underlie the processes are described for the embryo and in the adult. Determination may occur in adult life during regeneration, wound healing, cancer formation and in the immune and blood systems, and the possible genetic basis for the events is explored. The influence of the cell environment, the cell surface and the pericellular-extracellular matrix as mediators of external signals is discussed.
1. A first look at cell commitment
2. Genomic constancy and nuclear totipotency
3. Gene action and regulation
4. The cell surface
5. The extracellular environment
7. The stability of determination and differentiation
8. From embryo to adult
9. Growth and form - the consequences of differentiation
10. Some model systems
11. A final look at cell commitment.
Subject Areas: Biology, life sciences [PS]
