نتایج جستجو برای: vulval

تعداد نتایج: 1348  

Journal: :Developmental biology 2007
Krisztina Takács-Vellai Tibor Vellai Estella B Chen Yue Zhang Frédéric Guerry Michael J Stern Fritz Müller

The Notch signaling pathway controls growth, differentiation and patterning in divergent animal phyla; in humans, defective Notch signaling has been implicated in cancer, stroke and neurodegenerative disorders. Despite its developmental and medical significance, little is known about the factors that render cells to become competent for Notch signaling. Here we show that during vulval developme...

Journal: :Current Biology 1998
Marie-Anne Félix Paul W. Sternberg

Intercellular cell-survival signals play a major role in animal development [1]. In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, however, the stereotyped cell deaths that occur reproducibly during development are regulated in a cell-autonomous fashion (or, in a few cases, by a death-inducing signal) [2]. We show here the existence of a cell-survival signal acting on the vulval precursor cells in two ne...

Journal: :Current Biology 2000
Florence Solari Julie Ahringer

Chromatin-modifying complexes are important for transcriptional control, but their roles in the regulation of development are poorly understood. Here, we show that components of the nucleosome remodelling and histone deacetylase (NURD) complex [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] antagonise vulval development, which is induced by the Ras signal transduction pathway. In three of the six equivalent vulval precurs...

Journal: :WormBook 2005

Journal: :Development 1998
J N Maloof C Kenyon

The Ras signaling pathway specifies a variety of cell fates in many organisms. However, little is known about the genes that function downstream of the conserved signaling cassette, or what imparts the specificity necessary to cause Ras activation to trigger different responses in different tissues. In C. elegans, activation of the Ras pathway induces cells in the central body region to generat...

Journal: :Wiley interdisciplinary reviews. Developmental biology 2013
Adam J Schindler David R Sherwood

Understanding how cells move, change shape, and alter cellular behaviors to form organs, a process termed morphogenesis, is one of the great challenges of developmental biology. Formation of the Caenorhabditis elegans vulva is a powerful, simple, and experimentally accessible model for elucidating how morphogenetic processes produce an organ. In the first step of vulval development, three epith...

Journal: :Indian Dermatology Online Journal 2015

Journal: :Current Biology 2001
Marie Delattre Marie-Anne Félix

BACKGROUND The cell lineage of nematodes is mostly invariant for a given species, but varies between species. One can thus wonder how a cell lineage varies during evolution. We have started a microevolutionary approach within two genera by observing lineage variations of vulval precursor cells in different natural nematode populations of the same and closely related species. RESULTS In Caenor...

2014
David Q. Matus Emily Chang Sasha C. Makohon-Moore Mary A. Hagedorn Qiuyi Chi David R. Sherwood

Large gaps in basement membrane (BM) occur during organ remodelling and cancer cell invasion. Whether dividing cells, which temporarily reduce their attachment to BM, influence these breaches is unknown. Here we analyse uterine-vulval attachment during development across 21 species of rhabditid nematodes and find that the BM gap that forms between these organs is always bounded by a non-dividin...

Journal: :Developmental cell 2005
Toshia R Myers Iva Greenwald

Specification of vulval precursor cell (VPC) fates in C. elegans has served as an important signal transduction paradigm. Genetic studies have indicated that a large group of synthetic multivulva (SynMuv) genes, including the Rb ortholog lin-35, antagonizes the activity of the EGF receptor-Ras-MAP kinase pathway during VPC specification. A prevalent view has been that Rb-mediated transcriptiona...

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