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How germ granules promote germ cell fate.

Melissa C PamulaRuth Lehmann
Published in: Nature reviews. Genetics (2024)
Germ cells are the only cells in the body capable of giving rise to a new organism, and this totipotency hinges on their ability to assemble membraneless germ granules. These specialized RNA and protein complexes are hallmarks of germ cells throughout their life cycle: as embryonic germ granules in late oocytes and zygotes, Balbiani bodies in immature oocytes, and nuage in maturing gametes. Decades of developmental, genetic and biochemical studies have identified protein and RNA constituents unique to germ granules and have implicated these in germ cell identity, genome integrity and gamete differentiation. Now, emerging research is defining germ granules as biomolecular condensates that achieve high molecular concentrations by phase separation, and it is assigning distinct roles to germ granules during different stages of germline development. This organization of the germ cell cytoplasm into cellular subcompartments seems to be critical not only for the flawless continuity through the germline life cycle within the developing organism but also for the success of the next generation.
Keyphrases
  • germ cell
  • induced apoptosis
  • life cycle
  • cell cycle arrest
  • oxidative stress
  • signaling pathway
  • gene expression
  • cell death
  • protein protein
  • cell proliferation
  • binding protein
  • case control