AbstractIn zebrafish, skeletal muscle precursors can adopt at least three distinct fates: fast, non-pioneer slow, or pioneer slow muscle fibers. Slow muscle fibers develop from adaxial cells and depend on Hedgehog signaling. We analyzed when precursors become committed to their fates and the step(s) along their differentiation pathway affected by Hedgehog. Unexpectedly, we find that embryos deficient in Hedgehog signaling still contain postmitotic adaxial cells that differentiate into fast muscle fibers instead of slow. We show that by the onset of gastrulation, slow and fast muscle precursors are already spatially segregated but uncommitted to their fates until much later, in the segmental plate when slow precursors become independent of H...
cells and expressing slow muscle precursors are expanded at 19 hpf (A-D). At 19 hpf, expression is h...
AbstractThe most obvious segmental structures in the vertebrate embryo are somites: transient struct...
International audienceOne of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivale...
AbstractIn zebrafish, skeletal muscle precursors can adopt at least three distinct fates: fast, non-...
AbstractThe specification and morphogenesis of slow and fast twitch muscle fibers are crucial for mu...
AbstractVertebrate myogenesis is regulated by signaling proteins secreted from surrounding tissues. ...
AbstractVertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inducti...
Vertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inductive signa...
AbstractThe specification of different muscle cell types in the zebrafish embryo requires signals th...
AbstractSharp borders between cells with different developmental fates are important for patterning ...
Sharp borders between cells with different developmental fates are important for patterning of inver...
AbstractHedgehog proteins have been implicated in the control of myogenesis in the medial vertebrate...
In tetrapod phylogeny, the dramatic modifications of the trunk have received less attention than the...
AbstractBackground: In the zebrafish embryo, the differentiation of distinct muscle fiber types has ...
One of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivalent potentiala??an equi...
cells and expressing slow muscle precursors are expanded at 19 hpf (A-D). At 19 hpf, expression is h...
AbstractThe most obvious segmental structures in the vertebrate embryo are somites: transient struct...
International audienceOne of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivale...
AbstractIn zebrafish, skeletal muscle precursors can adopt at least three distinct fates: fast, non-...
AbstractThe specification and morphogenesis of slow and fast twitch muscle fibers are crucial for mu...
AbstractVertebrate myogenesis is regulated by signaling proteins secreted from surrounding tissues. ...
AbstractVertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inducti...
Vertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inductive signa...
AbstractThe specification of different muscle cell types in the zebrafish embryo requires signals th...
AbstractSharp borders between cells with different developmental fates are important for patterning ...
Sharp borders between cells with different developmental fates are important for patterning of inver...
AbstractHedgehog proteins have been implicated in the control of myogenesis in the medial vertebrate...
In tetrapod phylogeny, the dramatic modifications of the trunk have received less attention than the...
AbstractBackground: In the zebrafish embryo, the differentiation of distinct muscle fiber types has ...
One of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivalent potentiala??an equi...
cells and expressing slow muscle precursors are expanded at 19 hpf (A-D). At 19 hpf, expression is h...
AbstractThe most obvious segmental structures in the vertebrate embryo are somites: transient struct...
International audienceOne of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivale...