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Cytoplasm's Got Moves

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL CELL
Volume 56, Issue 2, Pages 213-226

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2020.12.002

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The cytoplasm is a gel-like crowded environment composed of various macromolecules and organelles, with highly organized and heterogeneous structure that restricts the diffusive dynamics of molecules. Despite its crowded nature at the microscopic scale, large-scale reorganization of the cytoplasm is required for important cellular functions, such as cell division and polarization. The mechanisms by which the cytoskeleton drives cytoplasmic reorganization across different scales, structures, and species are only beginning to be understood.
Cytoplasm is a gel-like crowded environment composed of various macromolecules, organelles, cytoskeletal networks, and cytosol. The structure of the cytoplasm is highly organized and heterogeneous due to the crowding of its constituents and their effective compartmentalization. In such an environment, the diffusive dynamics of the molecules are restricted, an effect that is further amplified by clustering and anchoring of molecules. Despite the crowded nature of the cytoplasm at the microscopic scale, large-scale reorganization of the cytoplasm is essential for important cellular functions, such as cell division and polarization. How such mesoscale reorganization of the cytoplasm is achieved, especially for large cells such as oocytes or syncytial tissues that can span hundreds of micrometers in size, is only beginning to be understood. In this review, we will discuss recent advances in elucidating the molecular, cellular, and biophysical mechanisms by which the cytoskeleton drives cytoplasmic reorganization across different scales, structures, and species.

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