“…The adherens junction is a thick density that forms a con tinuous belt around the apical end of each epithelial cell (Kramer et al, 1991;Cagan and Ready, 1989b) sevenless (Banerjee et al, 1987; crumbs Phosphotyrosine (J.-W. Wu, D. F. Woods and P. J. Bryant, unpublished) boss (Krämer et al, 1991;Cagan et al, 1992) sevenless (Banerjee et al, 1987; Notch (Artavanis-Tsakonas et al, 1991;Fehon et al, 1991) dig (Woods and Bryant, 1991) Fasciclin III (Snow et al, 1989) DA.1B6 antigen (Brower et al, 1980) Band 4.1 (R. Fehon, personal communication) PS2 antigen (Brower et al, 1985) (enriched basally) F7D6 (Bedian and Jungklaus, 1987) (enriched basally) armadillo (Peifer and Wieschaus, 1990) wingless (González et al, 1991) Actin Neuroglian (Bieber et al, 1989) Dabl (Bennett and Hoffmann, 1992) a-Spectrin (Dubreuil et al, 1987) Neuroglian (Bieber et al, 1989) and is associated with actin microfilaments (Poodry and Schneiderman, 1970;Rodriguez-Boulan and Nelson, 1989). One of the main functions of adherens junctions appears to be in cell adhesion (Geiger et al, 1987) and at least one group of cell adhesion molecules, the cadherins, and their associated anchoring molecules, the catenins, have been localized at adherens junctions (Geiger and Ayalon, 1992).…”