Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • actin cytoskeleton (1)
  • cellular (5)
  • EPH (5)
  • ephrins (7)
  • family (4)
  • receptor (1)
  • receptors eph (2)
  • regulates (1)
  • signal (2)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    The EPH receptor tyrosine kinases and their signaling partners, the EPHRINS, comprise a large class of cell signaling molecules that plays diverse roles in development. As cell membrane-anchored signaling molecules, they regulate cellular organization by modulating the strength of cellular contacts, usually by impacting the actin cytoskeleton or cell adhesion programs. Through these cellular functions, EPH/EPHRIN signaling often regulates tissue shape. Indeed, recent evidence indicates that this signaling family is ancient and associated with the origin of multicellularity. Though extensively studied, our understanding of the signaling mechanisms employed by this large family of signaling proteins remains patchwork, and a truly "canonical" EPH/EPHRIN signal transduction pathway is not known and may not exist. Instead, several foundational evolutionarily conserved mechanisms are overlaid by a myriad of tissue -specific functions, though common themes emerge from these as well. Here, I review recent advances and the related contexts that have provided new understanding of the conserved and varied molecular and cellular mechanisms employed by EPH/EPHRIN signaling during development. Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    Citation

    Jeffrey O Bush. Cellular and molecular mechanisms of EPH/EPHRIN signaling in evolution and development. Current topics in developmental biology. 2022;149:153-201

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 35606056

    View Full Text