نتایج جستجو برای: neurulation

تعداد نتایج: 641  

Journal: :The International journal of developmental biology 2010
Anupama A Mathi Tekchand C Gaupale Corinne Dupuy Nishikant Subhedar Shobha Bhargava

The iodotyrosine dehalogenase1 (DEHAL1) enzyme is a transmembrane protein that belongs to the nitroreductase family and shows a highly conserved N-terminal domain. DEHAL1 is present in the liver, kidney and thyroid of mammals. DEHAL1 is known to act on diiodotyrosine (DIT) and monoiodotyrosine (MIT), and is involved in iodine recycling in relation to thyroglobulin. Here, we show the distributio...

Journal: :Development 2002
George W Yip Patrizia Ferretti Andrew J Copp

Heparan sulphate proteoglycans have been implicated in the binding and presentation of several growth factors to their receptors, thereby regulating cellular growth and differentiation. To investigate the role of heparan sulphate proteoglycans in mouse spinal neurulation, we administered chlorate, a competitive inhibitor of glycosaminoglycan sulphation, to cultured E8.5 embryos. Treated embryos...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1975
D Moran R W Rice

Data from neural crest cultures indicate that cell surface coat material (CSM) is directly involved in cellular migration and events surrounding differentiation. To investigate whether the CSM also has a morphogenetic role, embryos of the amphibian Ambystoma maculatum were examined ultrastructurally throughout the stages of neurulation. Segments of the neural axis were fixed in glutaraldehyde-c...

Journal: :Molecular and cellular biology 2005
Amy N Abell Jaime A Rivera-Perez Bruce D Cuevas Mark T Uhlik Susan Sather Nancy L Johnson Suzanne K Minton Jean M Lauder Ann M Winter-Vann Kazuhiro Nakamura Terry Magnuson Richard R Vaillancourt Lynn E Heasley Gary L Johnson

Skeletal disorders and neural tube closure defects represent clinically significant human malformations. The signaling networks regulating normal skeletal patterning and neurulation are largely unknown. Targeted mutation of the active site lysine of MEK kinase 4 (MEKK4) produces a kinase-inactive MEKK4 protein (MEKK4(K1361R)). Embryos homozygous for this mutation die at birth as a result of ske...

Journal: :Development 2000
O Cleaver D W Seufert P A Krieg

The patterning and differentiation of the vertebrate endoderm requires signaling from adjacent tissues. In this report, we demonstrate that signals from the notochord are critical for the development of the hypochord, which is a transient, endodermally derived structure that lies immediately ventral to the notochord in the amphibian and fish embryo. It appears likely that the hypochord is requi...

Journal: :Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE 2010
Pradeepa Jayachandran Elim Hong Rachel Brewster

Key to understanding the morphogenetic processes that shape the early vertebrate embryo is the ability to image cells at high resolution. In zebrafish embryos, injection of plasmid DNA results in mosaic expression, allowing for the visualization of single cells or small clusters of cells (1) . We describe how injection of plasmid DNA encoding membrane-targeted Green Fluorescent Protein (mGFP) u...

Journal: :Mechanisms of Development 2009
Doreen Siegel Maximilian Schuff Franz Oswald Ying Cao Walter Knöchel

The maintenance of pluripotency in mammalian embryonic stem cells depends upon the expression of regulatory genes like Oct3/4 and Sox2. While homologues of these genes are also characterized in non-mammalian vertebrates, like birds, amphibians and fish, existence and function of developmental pluripotency associated genes (Dppa) in lower vertebrates have not yet been reported. Here we describe ...

Journal: :Current Biology 2000
Grant N. Wheeler Fiona S. Hamilton Stefan Hoppler

The amphibian Xenopus laevis has been successfully used for many years as a model system for studying vertebrate development. Because of technical limitations, however, molecular investigations have mainly concentrated on early stages. We have developed a straightforward method for stage-specific induction of gene expression in transgenic Xenopus embryos [1] [2]. This method is based on the Xen...

Journal: :Mechanisms of Development 2009
Russell Neuner Hélène Cousin Catherine McCusker Michael Coyne Dominique Alfandari

ADAM19 is a member of the meltrin subfamily of ADAM metalloproteases. In Xenopus, ADAM19 is present as a maternal transcript. Zygotic expression starts during gastrulation and is apparent in the dorsal blastopore lip. ADAM19 expression through neurulation and tailbud formation becomes enriched in dorsal structures such as the neural tube, the notochord and the somites. Using morpholino knock-do...

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