The International Journal of Developmental Biology

Int. J. Dev. Biol. 42: 379 - 383 (1998)

Vol 42, Issue 3

Special Issue: Developmental Genetics of Drosophila

Asymmetry and cell fate in the Drosophila embryonic CNS

Published: 1 April 1998

S Fuerstenberg, J Broadus and C Q Doe

Department of Cell and Structural Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana 61821, USA.

Abstract

Drosophila CNS precursors, neuroblasts, repeatedly divide to produce a large neuroblast and a smaller GMC. This division is asymmetric with regard to sibling cell size, mitotic potential and gene expression. Recent work has identified a number of molecules that show a polarized distribution during neuroblast mitosis: prospero RNA and Inscuteable, Miranda, Prospero, Staufen, and Numb proteins. The process of asymmetric localization of proteins and RNAs is cell cycle dependent, microfilament dependent and coordinated with the positioning of the mitotic spindle, which results in the unequal distribution of cell fate determinants to a specific daughter cell at cytokinesis.

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