Cells control their size through an intricate balance of cell growth, cell division, and cell death. Extensive work on unicellular model organisms revealed that cell-size-dependent cell cycle progression accounts for major aspects of cell size regulation and provided insights into the underlying molecular mechanisms. Nevertheless, elaborate live-cell imaging approaches still reveal new phenomenological observations that challenge our simplified models of size regulation and raise the question of what determines optimal cell size. Here, I aim to give a conceptual overview of the many processes contributing to cell size regulation and summarize recent developments in the field
Increasingly accurate and massive data have recently shed light on the fundamental question of how c...
Most cell types living in a stable environment tend to keep a constant characteristic size over succ...
To achieve a stable size distribution over multiple generations, proliferating cells require a means...
High-throughput imaging has led to an explosion of observations regarding cell-size homeostasis acro...
The maintenance of cell size homeostasis has been studied for years in different cellular systems. W...
An adult animal consists of cells of vastly different size and activity, but the regulation of cell ...
AbstractFirst paragraph (this article has no abstract) For well over 100 years, cell biologists have...
The size of a cell is determined by a combination of synthesis, self-assembly, incoming matter and t...
AbstractSize is a fundamental attribute impacting cellular design, fitness, and function. Size homeo...
Cell size is an important adaptive trait that influences nearly all aspects of cellular physiology. ...
Although questions on cell size have been investigated for more than half a century, molecular mecha...
The homogeneity in cell size observed in many normal proliferating tissues, and the contrasting size...
Despite decades of research, how mammalian cell size is controlled remains unclear because of the di...
International audienceIncreasingly accurate and massive data have recently shed light on the fundame...
Abstract Background Conlon and Raff propose that mammalian cells grow linearly during the division c...
Increasingly accurate and massive data have recently shed light on the fundamental question of how c...
Most cell types living in a stable environment tend to keep a constant characteristic size over succ...
To achieve a stable size distribution over multiple generations, proliferating cells require a means...
High-throughput imaging has led to an explosion of observations regarding cell-size homeostasis acro...
The maintenance of cell size homeostasis has been studied for years in different cellular systems. W...
An adult animal consists of cells of vastly different size and activity, but the regulation of cell ...
AbstractFirst paragraph (this article has no abstract) For well over 100 years, cell biologists have...
The size of a cell is determined by a combination of synthesis, self-assembly, incoming matter and t...
AbstractSize is a fundamental attribute impacting cellular design, fitness, and function. Size homeo...
Cell size is an important adaptive trait that influences nearly all aspects of cellular physiology. ...
Although questions on cell size have been investigated for more than half a century, molecular mecha...
The homogeneity in cell size observed in many normal proliferating tissues, and the contrasting size...
Despite decades of research, how mammalian cell size is controlled remains unclear because of the di...
International audienceIncreasingly accurate and massive data have recently shed light on the fundame...
Abstract Background Conlon and Raff propose that mammalian cells grow linearly during the division c...
Increasingly accurate and massive data have recently shed light on the fundamental question of how c...
Most cell types living in a stable environment tend to keep a constant characteristic size over succ...
To achieve a stable size distribution over multiple generations, proliferating cells require a means...