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Κυριακή 6 Δεκεμβρίου 2015

Autocrine Signaling and Quorum Sensing: Extreme Ends of a Common Spectrum

Publication date: Available online 5 December 2015
Source:Trends in Cell Biology
Author(s): Berkalp A. Doğaner, Lawrence K.Q. Yan, Hyun Youk
'Secrete-and-sense cells' can communicate by secreting a signaling molecule while also producing a receptor that detects the molecule. The cell can potentially 'talk' to itself ('self-communication') or talk to neighboring cells with the same receptor ('neighbor communication'). The predominant forms of secrete-and-sense cells are self-communicating 'autocrine cells', which are largely found in animals, and neighbor-communicating 'quorum sensing cells', which are mostly associated with bacteria. While assumed to function independently of one another, recent studies have discovered quorum-sensing organs and autocrine-signaling microbes. Moreover, similar types of genetic circuit control many autocrine and quorum-sensing cells. Here, we outline these recent findings and explain how autocrine and quorum sensing are two sides of a many-sided 'dice' created by the versatile secrete-and-sense cell.



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