[
Semin Cell Dev Biol,
2023]
Apical-Basal polarity is a fundamental property of all epithelial cells that underlies both their form and function. The gut is made up of a single layer of intestinal epithelial cells, with distinct apical, lateral and basal domains. Occluding junctions at the apical side of the lateral domains create a barrier between the gut lumen and the body, which is crucial for tissue homeostasis, protection against gastrointestinal pathogens and for the maintenance of the immune response. Apical-basal polarity in most epithelia is established by conserved polarity factors, but recent evidence suggests that the gut epithelium in at least some organisms polarises by novel mechanisms. In this review, we discuss the recent advances in understanding polarity factors by focussing on work in C. elegans, Drosophila, Zebrafish and Mouse.
[
Nature Neuroscience,
2004]
At first glance, the nervous systems of vertebrates and invertebrates seem bilaterally symmetrical, but on closer inspection left-right asymmetries become apparent. Humans, for example, show gross anatomical differences between right and left temporal lobes, and visual and language faculties are asymmetrically distributed between the two hemispheres. How these asymmetries arise during development remains something of a mystery (for review, see ref.1). In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the AWC and ASE chemosensory neuron pairs are bilaterally symmetrical based on anatomical considerations, but nevertheless display asymmetrical gene expression patterns. A recent study in nature by Johnston and Hobert identifies a microRNA (miRNA) as a crucial mediator of this asymmetry in the ASE neurons.
[
Genes Dev,
1999]
Double-strand RNA (dsRNA) is a signal for gene-specific silencing of expression in a number of organisms. This phenomenon was demonstrated recently in Caenorhabditis elegans when dsRNA was injected into the worm and the corresponding gene products disappeared from both the somatic cells of the organism as well as in its F1 progeny. This RNA interference, RNAi, has been generalized to many genes in C. elegans. ds-RNA can also suppress expression of specific genes in plants, a component of the phenomenon called cosuppression. Two recent reports document dsRNA-mediated interference with expression of specific genes in other organisms. Double-strand RNA produced gene-specific phenotypes in Trypanosoma brucei and, very recently, dsRNA-mediated interference was demonstrated in Drosophila. Thus, the RNAi phenomenon is likely to be a general mechanism for gene regulation and may be critical for many developmental and antiviral processes.