[
Cell Biochem Biophys,
2006]
In most cell types, distinct forms of intercellular junctions have been visualized at the ultrastructural level. Among these, the septate junctions are thought to seal the neighboring cells and thus to function as the paracellular barriers. The most extensively studied form of septate junctions, referred to as the pleated septate junctions, is ultrastructurally distinct with an electron-dense ladder-like arrangement of transverse septa present in invertebrates as well as vertebrates. In invertebrates, such as the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, septate junctions are present in all ectodermally derived epithelia, imaginal discs, and the nervous system. In vertebrates, septate junctions are present in the myelinated nerves at the paranodal interface between the myelin loops and the axonal membrane. In this review, we present an evolutionary perspective of septate junctions, especially their initial identification across phyla, and discuss many common features of their morphology, molecular organization, and functional similarities in invertebrates and vertebrates.
[
Cell,
1996]
Anyone who has watched an early embryo develop cannot help but be awed by the choreography of the early cleavages. The orientation and timing of cleavage in an animal cell are always such that the cleavage furrow bisects the mitotic apparatus (MA) during telophase, thus ensuring the equal partitioning of daughter chromosomes. In addition, the regulation of cleavage plane orientation is necessary for correct partitioning of localized determinants to specific daughter cells, for optimal positioning of cells in developing embryos, and for morphogenesis in plants, which are not motile.
[
Science,
1998]
The Caenorhabditis elegans genome sequence was surveyed for transcription factor and signaling gene families that have been shown to regulate development in a variety of species. About 10 to 25 percent of the genes in most of the gene families already have been genetically analyzed in C. elegans, about half of the genes detect probable orthologs in other species, and about 10 to 25 percent of the genes are, at present, unique to C. elegans. Caenorhabditis elegans is also missing genes that are found in vertebrates and other invertebrates. Thus the genome sequence reveals universals in developmental control that are the legacy of metazoan complexity before the Cambrian explosion, as well as genes that have been more recently invented or lost in particular phylogenetic lineages.AD - Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA. ruvkun@frodo.mgh.harvard.eduFAU - Ruvkun, GAU - Ruvkun GFAU - Hobert, OAU - Hobert OLA - engPT - Journal ArticlePT - ReviewPT - Review, TutorialCY - UNITED STATESTA - ScienceJID - 0404511RN - 0 (Helminth Proteins)RN - 0 (Transcription Factors)SB - IM