Determination of organ size: a need to focus on growth rate, not size
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Published:2020
Issue:4-5-6
Volume:64
Page:299-318
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ISSN:0214-6282
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Container-title:The International Journal of Developmental Biology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Int. J. Dev. Biol.
Author:
Coelho Carmen M.A.
Abstract
The regulation of growth and the determination of organ-size in animals is an area of research that has received much attention during the past two and a half decades. Classic regeneration and cell-competition studies performed during the last century suggested that for size to be determined, organ-size is sensed and this sense of size feeds back into the growth control mechanism such that growth stops at the “correct” size. Recent work using Drosophila imaginal discs as a system has provided a particularly detailed cellular and molecular understanding of growth. Yet, a clear mechanistic basis for size-sensing has not emerged. I re-examine these studies from a different perspective and ask whether there is scope for alternate modes of size control in which size does not need to be sensed.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Embryology