Edelman G M
Ciba Found Symp. 1987;125:192-216. doi: 10.1002/9780470513408.ch12.
From very early developmental times, cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) play key roles in linking cells together and regulating cell movement. By virtue of their capacity to link epithelia and condense mesenchyme, CAMs can act as mechanochemical regulators of morphogenesis. In the vertebrate species examined so far, CAMs appear in ordered sequences on cell surfaces during development. In this paper, evidence is reviewed indicating that the sequential expression of CAMs on cell surfaces at a variety of sites of embryonic induction follows a set of modulation rules that are first discernible at early gastrulation. These rules are related to the adhesion of cells in collectives and to the establishment of borders between such collectives. After gastrulation, all mesenchymal conversions employ N-CAM and show changes in its prevalence in a transition N----0----N where 0 means low or undetectable amounts of the CAM (rule I). In contrast, epithelia modulate from a state in which N-CAM and L-CAM appear simultaneously to the expression of only one or the other of these primary CAMs (rule II). At a variety of induction sites, cell collectives obeying rule I are found in proximity to cell collectives obeying rule II. During the morphogenesis of complex structures such as the feather or the optic placode, one can see a recursive application of these rules, reflecting the formation of significant histological boundaries within which the expression of gene products other than CAMs can lead to great morphological diversity. It is suggested that the genes for CAMs are regulated independently from and prior to those specifying intracellular proteins in a given tissue. According to this proposal, the existence of the epigenetic rules governing CAM expression reflects the evolutionary conservation of a key means of establishing tissue and animal form through the mechanochemical regulation of processes such as cell division, movement and death.
从发育早期开始,细胞黏附分子(CAMs)在将细胞连接在一起并调节细胞运动方面发挥着关键作用。凭借其连接上皮组织和凝聚间充质的能力,CAMs可作为形态发生的机械化学调节因子。在迄今为止所研究的脊椎动物物种中,CAMs在发育过程中按有序序列出现在细胞表面。本文回顾了相关证据,表明在胚胎诱导的多个位点,CAMs在细胞表面的顺序表达遵循一组调节规则,这些规则在原肠胚形成早期首次可被识别。这些规则与细胞集体中的细胞黏附以及此类集体之间边界的建立有关。原肠胚形成后,所有间充质转化都利用N-CAM,并在N----0----N的转变中显示其发生率的变化,其中0表示该CAM含量低或无法检测到(规则I)。相比之下,上皮组织从N-CAM和L-CAM同时出现的状态调节为仅表达这两种主要CAM中的一种(规则II)。在各种诱导位点,遵循规则I的细胞集体与遵循规则II的细胞集体相邻。在诸如羽毛或视板等复杂结构的形态发生过程中,可以看到这些规则的递归应用,这反映了重要组织学边界的形成,在这些边界内,除CAMs之外的基因产物的表达可导致巨大的形态多样性。有人提出,CAMs的基因在给定组织中独立于并先于指定细胞内蛋白质的基因受到调节。根据这一提议,支配CAM表达的表观遗传规则的存在反映了通过对细胞分裂、运动和死亡等过程进行机械化学调节来建立组织和动物形态的关键手段在进化上的保守性。