Integrated development of diverse tissues gives rise to a functional, mobile vertebrate musculoskeletal system. However, the genetics and cellular interactions that drive the integration of muscle, tendon, and skeleton are poorly understood. In the vertebrate head, neural crest cells, from which cranial tendons derive, pattern developing muscles just as tendons have been shown to in limb and trunk tissue, yet the mechanisms of this patterning are unknown. From a forward genetic screen, we determined that cyp26b1 is critical for musculoskeletal integration in the ventral pharyngeal arches, particularly in the mandibulohyoid junction where first and second arch muscles interconnect. Using time-lapse confocal analyses, we detail musculoskeleta...
The neural crest (NC) is a major contributor to the vertebrate craniofacial skeleton, detailed in mo...
AbstractGenetic screens for synaptogenesis mutants have been performed in many organisms, but few if...
AbstractDespite the prevalence of developmental myopathies resulting from muscle fiber defects, the ...
Vertebrate head muscles exhibit a highly conserved pattern of innervation and skeletal connectivity ...
AbstractConvergent extension driven by mediolateral intercalation of chondrocytes is a key process t...
Tendons transmit force from muscle to bone, enabling movement; ligaments connect bone to bone, maint...
Vertebrate skeletons are an intricate framework of bony and cartilaginous structures that form throu...
<div><p>Pharyngeal endoderm is essential for and can reprogram development of the head skeleton. Her...
The myotendinous junction (MTJ) is the major site of force transfer in skeletal muscle, and defects ...
Muscle development involves the specification and morphogenesis of muscle fibers that attach to tend...
The musculoskeletal system supports the internal structures of the body and consists of bones, ligam...
<div><p>The intricate shaping of the facial skeleton is essential for function of the vertebrate jaw...
The development and growth of vertebrate axial muscle have been studied for decades at both the desc...
<div><p>The neural crest (NC) is a major contributor to the vertebrate craniofacial skeleton, detail...
AbstractThe most obvious segmental structures in the vertebrate embryo are somites: transient struct...
The neural crest (NC) is a major contributor to the vertebrate craniofacial skeleton, detailed in mo...
AbstractGenetic screens for synaptogenesis mutants have been performed in many organisms, but few if...
AbstractDespite the prevalence of developmental myopathies resulting from muscle fiber defects, the ...
Vertebrate head muscles exhibit a highly conserved pattern of innervation and skeletal connectivity ...
AbstractConvergent extension driven by mediolateral intercalation of chondrocytes is a key process t...
Tendons transmit force from muscle to bone, enabling movement; ligaments connect bone to bone, maint...
Vertebrate skeletons are an intricate framework of bony and cartilaginous structures that form throu...
<div><p>Pharyngeal endoderm is essential for and can reprogram development of the head skeleton. Her...
The myotendinous junction (MTJ) is the major site of force transfer in skeletal muscle, and defects ...
Muscle development involves the specification and morphogenesis of muscle fibers that attach to tend...
The musculoskeletal system supports the internal structures of the body and consists of bones, ligam...
<div><p>The intricate shaping of the facial skeleton is essential for function of the vertebrate jaw...
The development and growth of vertebrate axial muscle have been studied for decades at both the desc...
<div><p>The neural crest (NC) is a major contributor to the vertebrate craniofacial skeleton, detail...
AbstractThe most obvious segmental structures in the vertebrate embryo are somites: transient struct...
The neural crest (NC) is a major contributor to the vertebrate craniofacial skeleton, detailed in mo...
AbstractGenetic screens for synaptogenesis mutants have been performed in many organisms, but few if...
AbstractDespite the prevalence of developmental myopathies resulting from muscle fiber defects, the ...