4.5 Article

Intermediate filaments as effectors of differentiation

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages 155-162

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceb.2020.10.009

Keywords

Intermediate filament; Keratin; Nuclear lamins; Differentiation; Cell determination; Notch; Hippo; Mechanosensing; Mechanotransduction; Extracellular matrix; Redox; Disulfides

Categories

Funding

  1. [R01/R56AR047042]
  2. [R01AR044232]
  3. [T32 CA009696]

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Intermediate filaments are a diverse group of proteins that play important roles in lineage determination, cell differentiation, and tissue homeostasis. Evidence suggests that these filaments function as sensors and transducers of mechanical forces, interacting with cellular redox balance, microenvironmental cues, and fundamental processes.
After the initial discovery of intermediate filament (IF)-forming proteins in 1968, a decade would elapse before they were revealed to comprise a diverse group of proteins which undergo tissue-, developmental stage-, differentiation-, and context-dependent regulation. Our appreciation for just how large (n = 70), conserved, complex, and dynamic IF genes and proteins are became even sharper upon completion of the human genome project. While there has been extraordinary progress in understanding the multimodal roles of IFs in cells and tissues, even revealing them as direct causative agents in a broad array of human genetic disorders, the link between individual IFs and cell differentiation has remained elusive. Here, we review evidence that demonstrates a role for IFs in lineage determination, cell differentiation, and tissue homeostasis. A major theme in this review is the function of IFs as sensors and transducers of mechanical forces, intersecting microenvironmental cues and fundamental processes through cellular redox balance.

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