g.oxfordjournals.org/ D ow nloaded from 2 During kidney development, Pax2 and Pax8 are expressed very early in the mammalian nephric duct and both precede the expression of receptor tyrosine kinase, c-Ret. However, in Pax2-/- mutant mice, expression of c-Ret is lost after embryonic day 10.5. As the Ret/Gdnf pathway is necessary for renal development and there is a temporal and spatial relationship of Pax2 and c-Ret expression in the developing genitourinary system, we postulate that Pax2 is necessary for c-Ret expression in the developing kidney. In vitro, Pax2 protein is capable of physically interacting with a c-RET promoter, and both Pax2 and Pax8 can activate the expression of a reporter gene driven by the c-RET promoter. Compound heter...
The transcription factors HNF1B and Pax2, co-expressed in the Wolffian duct and ureteric bud epithel...
<div><p>Congenital reduction in nephron number (renal hypoplasia) is a predisposing factor for chron...
AbstractThe Pax family of transcription factors plays important roles in vertebrate organogenesis. P...
Re-expression of the developmental gene Pax-2 during experimental acute tubular necrosis in mice.Bac...
The 9 PAX genes constitute a family of developmental transcriptional regulators characterized by a h...
SummaryPax2 is a transcription factor with important functions during kidney development [1–3]. Ecto...
In normal human populations, nephron number varies widely from 300,000 to over one million nephrons ...
Obstruction of the urinary tract activates apoptotic pathways in collecting duct cells and leads to...
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is caused by mutations of the PKD1 or PKD2 genes...
The transcription factor PAX2 is expressed during normal kidney development and is thought to influe...
RET is a tyrosine kinase receptor that induces cell survival, proliferation and migration. When bou...
AbstractPAX2, a member of the “paired-box” family of homeotic genes, is a nuclear transcription fact...
Congenital reduction in nephron number (renal hypoplasia) is a predisposing factor for chronic kidne...
Molecular mechanisms that lead to congenital anomalies of kidneys and the lower urinary tract (CAKUT...
As in most organs, the emerging theme in kidney development is the importance of cross-talk between ...
The transcription factors HNF1B and Pax2, co-expressed in the Wolffian duct and ureteric bud epithel...
<div><p>Congenital reduction in nephron number (renal hypoplasia) is a predisposing factor for chron...
AbstractThe Pax family of transcription factors plays important roles in vertebrate organogenesis. P...
Re-expression of the developmental gene Pax-2 during experimental acute tubular necrosis in mice.Bac...
The 9 PAX genes constitute a family of developmental transcriptional regulators characterized by a h...
SummaryPax2 is a transcription factor with important functions during kidney development [1–3]. Ecto...
In normal human populations, nephron number varies widely from 300,000 to over one million nephrons ...
Obstruction of the urinary tract activates apoptotic pathways in collecting duct cells and leads to...
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is caused by mutations of the PKD1 or PKD2 genes...
The transcription factor PAX2 is expressed during normal kidney development and is thought to influe...
RET is a tyrosine kinase receptor that induces cell survival, proliferation and migration. When bou...
AbstractPAX2, a member of the “paired-box” family of homeotic genes, is a nuclear transcription fact...
Congenital reduction in nephron number (renal hypoplasia) is a predisposing factor for chronic kidne...
Molecular mechanisms that lead to congenital anomalies of kidneys and the lower urinary tract (CAKUT...
As in most organs, the emerging theme in kidney development is the importance of cross-talk between ...
The transcription factors HNF1B and Pax2, co-expressed in the Wolffian duct and ureteric bud epithel...
<div><p>Congenital reduction in nephron number (renal hypoplasia) is a predisposing factor for chron...
AbstractThe Pax family of transcription factors plays important roles in vertebrate organogenesis. P...