Making a firm decision: multifaceted regulation of cell fate in the early mouse embryo
- PMID: 19536196
- DOI: 10.1038/nrg2564
Making a firm decision: multifaceted regulation of cell fate in the early mouse embryo
Abstract
The preimplantation mammalian embryo offers a striking opportunity to address the question of how and why apparently identical cells take on separate fates. Two cell fate decisions are taken before the embryo implants; these decisions set apart a group of pluripotent cells, progenitors for the future body, from the distinct extraembryonic lineages of trophectoderm and primitive endoderm. New molecular, cellular and developmental insights reveal the interplay of transcriptional regulation, epigenetic modifications, cell position and cell polarity in these two fate decisions in the mouse. We discuss how mechanisms proposed in previously distinct models might work in concert to progressively reinforce cell fate decisions through feedback loops.
Comment in
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Stochasticity versus determinism in development: a false dichotomy?Nat Rev Genet. 2010 Nov;11(11):743-4. doi: 10.1038/nrg2886. Epub 2010 Sep 28. Nat Rev Genet. 2010. PMID: 20877326 No abstract available.
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