Click on image to view larger version.

Fig. 2. Two examples where subcellular localization of signaling modules is
essential. Cell fate specification in the worm sex organ and the fly eye occur
in epithelia. In each case, an inducing cell (anchor cell or cell R8) provides
a ligand (secreted EGF or transmembrane protein BOSS) that interacts with a
receptor tyrosine kinase (Let-27 or sevenless) to activate a canonical
Ras/MAPK pathway. The MAPK pathway directs a precursor (vulval precursor or
Cell R7) toward a particular cell fate. In the case of vulva cell fate
specification in C. elegans, the anchor cell is in the stroma, and
therefore Let-27, and presumably its downstream targets, must reside in the
basolateral compartment to receive the signal. In the fly eye, both the
receptor, sevenless and the ligand, BOSS, are located in the microvilli of the
apical compartment.