Asymmetric segregation

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Date and country of first publication[1]

1982
United States

Definition

Asymmetric segregation refers to the unequal distribution of cellular components or factors during cell division, resulting in daughter cells with different characteristics. This process plays a key role in cell fate determination and differentiation in various organisms. For example, during stem cell division, asymmetric segregation can lead to one daughter cell retaining stem cell properties while the other becomes more specialized. This mechanism helps to generate cellular diversity and maintain tissue homeostasis in multicellular organisms.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Date and country of first publication as informed by the Scopus database (December 2023).
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Further reading

Lieberson S., Carter D.K. (1982) A Model for Inferring the Voluntary and involuntary causes of residential segregation. Demography, 19(4), 511-526. [1]

Chen Y., Fehr E., Fischbacher U., Morgan P. (2015) Decentralized matching and social segregation. Games and Economic Behavior, 90(), 17-43. Academic Press Inc..[2]