Paracrine signaling is a form of
cell-cell communication in which a cell produces a signal to induce changes in nearby cells, altering the behavior or
differentiation of those cells. Signaling molecules known as paracrine factors diffuse over a relatively short distance (local action), as opposed to
endocrine factors (hormones which travel considerably longer distances via the
circulatory system),
juxtacrine interactions, and
autocrine signaling. Cells that produce paracrine factors secrete them into the immediate
extracellular environment. Factors then travel to nearby cells in which the gradient of factor received determines the outcome. However, the exact distance that paracrine factors can travel is not certain.