Maintenance of cell population size is fundamental to the proper functioning of multicellular organisms. Here, we describe a cell-intrinsic cell density-sensing pathway that enabled T cells to reach and maintain an appropriate population size. This pathway operated "kin-to-kin" or between identical or similar T cell populations occupying a niche within a tissue or organ, such as the lymph nodes, spleen, and blood. We showed that this pathway depended on the cell density-dependent abundance of the evolutionarily conserved protein coronin 1, which coordinated prosurvival signaling with the inhibition of cell death until the cell population reached threshold densities. At or above threshold densities, coronin 1 expression peaked and remained s...
The WD repeat containing family of coronin proteins is generally referred to as F‑actin‑interacting ...
Cells often receive signals to proliferate, but how population density is controlled is unclear. Har...
How do different animals grow to be different sizes? The answer is programmed in their genes, encodi...
There are many different pathogenic stimuli that are able to activate the immune system, ranging fro...
To defend ourselves from invading pathogens, we are all equipped with an immune system, a complex ne...
Microbes have interacted with eukaryotic cells for as long as they have been co-existing. While many...
Coronins are WD repeat-containing proteins highly conserved in the eukaryotic kingdom implicated in ...
Actin polymerization plays a critical role in activated T lymphocytes both in regulating T cell rece...
2 An interesting but largely unanswered biological question is how eukaryotic organisms regulate the...
Cytokinesis, the physical division of one cell into two, is powered by constriction of an actomyosin...
Control of cell number is crucial to define body size during animal development and to restrict tumo...
All cells show size homeostasis owing to coordination of division with growth. In this issue, Allard...
Control of cell number is crucial to define body size during animal development and to restrict tumo...
International audienceActin polymerization plays a critical role in activated T lymphocytes both in ...
International audienceRunning title : actomyosin contractility maintains neutrophil nuclear integrit...
The WD repeat containing family of coronin proteins is generally referred to as F‑actin‑interacting ...
Cells often receive signals to proliferate, but how population density is controlled is unclear. Har...
How do different animals grow to be different sizes? The answer is programmed in their genes, encodi...
There are many different pathogenic stimuli that are able to activate the immune system, ranging fro...
To defend ourselves from invading pathogens, we are all equipped with an immune system, a complex ne...
Microbes have interacted with eukaryotic cells for as long as they have been co-existing. While many...
Coronins are WD repeat-containing proteins highly conserved in the eukaryotic kingdom implicated in ...
Actin polymerization plays a critical role in activated T lymphocytes both in regulating T cell rece...
2 An interesting but largely unanswered biological question is how eukaryotic organisms regulate the...
Cytokinesis, the physical division of one cell into two, is powered by constriction of an actomyosin...
Control of cell number is crucial to define body size during animal development and to restrict tumo...
All cells show size homeostasis owing to coordination of division with growth. In this issue, Allard...
Control of cell number is crucial to define body size during animal development and to restrict tumo...
International audienceActin polymerization plays a critical role in activated T lymphocytes both in ...
International audienceRunning title : actomyosin contractility maintains neutrophil nuclear integrit...
The WD repeat containing family of coronin proteins is generally referred to as F‑actin‑interacting ...
Cells often receive signals to proliferate, but how population density is controlled is unclear. Har...
How do different animals grow to be different sizes? The answer is programmed in their genes, encodi...