Everything about Asymmetric Cell Division totally explained
An
asymmetric cell division produces two daughter cells with different properties. This is in contrast to normal
cell divisions, which give rise to equivalent daughter cells. Notably,
stem cells divide asymmetrically to give rise to two distinct daughter cells: one copy of themselves and one cell programmed to differentiate into another cell type.
In principle, there are two mechanisms by which distinct properties may be conferred on the daughters of a dividing cell. In one, the daughter cells are initially equivalent but a difference is induced by
signaling between the cells. In another, the prospective daughter cells are made different at the time of division of the mother cell. Because this latter mechanism doesn't depend on interactions of cells with their environment it must rely on
intrinsic asymmetry. The term
asymmetric cell division usually refers to such intrinsic asymmetric divisions.
Intrinsic asymmetry
Intrinsic asymmetric divisions rely on the following mechanism. At
mitosis certain
proteins are localized asymmetrically to one half of the cell. Next, the cell is
cleaved as to separate the two halves. Thus, the asymmetrically localized proteins are inherited to only one of the daughter cells, causing that cell to be different from its sibling. Because these proteins determine what becomes of a cell they're called
cell fate determinants.
This mechanism raises two requirements: first, the mother cell must be
polarized; second, the
mitotic spindle must be aligned with the axis of polarity. The
cell biology of these events has been most successfully studied in three animal models: the mouse, the nematode
Caenorhabditis elegans and the fruitfly
Drosophila melanogaster.
The role of asymmetric divisions in development
Animals are made up of a vast number of distinct
cell types. During development these are generated from a single cell, the
zygote. Asymmetric divisions contribute to this expansion in cell type diversity by making two types of cells from one. For example, it's thought that many of the cells in the
central nervous system derive from asymmetric divisions.
Cells may divide asymmetrically to produce two novel cells at the expense of the mother cell. For example, in
plants, an asymmetric division of an unspecialized
epidermal cell can produce a guard cell mother cell that devides again to produce two
guard cells, the cells that control the closing and opening of
stomata. However, asymmetric divisions often give rise to only one novel cell type in addition to a new copy of the mother cell. Such divisions are called
self-renewing. Self-renewal is a hallmark of
stem cells, and there's growing evidence that
stem cells self-renew through asymmetric division. In this way the production of new cell types (
differentiation) is precisely balanced by renewal of the stem cell population.
Asymmetric division of somatic cells also creates a drift in cell function through the human life span contributing to aging of the organism. It is due to the asymmetric distribution of DNA between daughter cells.
Asymmetric Cell Division, Progress in Molecular and Subcellular Biology, volume 45, A. Macieira-Coelho, Editor. Springer Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York (2007), ISBN-10: 3-540-69160-0
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