[
Modern Cell Biology,
1994]
During the development of any multicellular organism, the behavior of any given cell can be influenced in two ways: by its ancestry, i.e., by the particular pattern of determinants it inherits (lineal programming); or by its environment, i.e., the signals it receives from other cells. In C. elegans, the relative importance of these two factors for the development of any given cell can be examined with an unusually high degree of precision. There are a number of reasons for this, but perhaps the most important is that the cell lineage, the particular pattern of cell divisions and differentiations that occur in development, is known, and is largely the same from animal to animal. Alterations in the lineage, therefore, can be understood in terms of altered developmental decisions of