AbstractThe canonical, β-catenin-dependent Wnt pathway is a crucial player in the early events of Xenopus development. Dorsal axis formation and mesoderm patterning are accepted effects of this pathway, but the regulation of expression of genes involved in mesoderm specification is not. This conclusion is based largely on the inability of the Wnt pathway to induce mesoderm in animal cap explants. Using injections of inhibitors of canonical Wnt signaling, we demonstrate that expression of the general mesodermal marker Brachyury (Xbra) requires a zygotic, ligand-dependent Wnt activity throughout the marginal zone. Analysis of the Xbra promoter reveals that putative TCF-binding sites mediate Wnt activation, the first sites in this well-studied...
The formation of primitive (embryonic) blood in vertebrates is mediated by spatio-temporally restric...
AbstractZygotic Wnt signaling has been shown to be involved in dorsoventral mesodermal patterning in...
AbstractMultiple factors, including members of the FGF, TGFβ, and Wnt family of proteins, are import...
Mesoderm formation results from an inducing process that requires maternal and zygotic FGF/MAPK and ...
AbstractWnt signaling functions repeatedly during embryonic development to induce different but spec...
AbstractBackground: The Brachyury (T) gene is required for the formation of posterior mesoderm and f...
AbstractCanonical Wnt signals have been implicated in multiple events during early embryogenesis, in...
The development of multicellular organisms relies on extracellular signaling pathways regulating the...
AbstractThe vertebral column is derived from somites, which are transient segments of the paraxial m...
AbstractIn Xenopus, two signaling systems, maternal β-Catenin and Nodal-related, are required for in...
AbstractHomologues of the murine Brachyury gene have been shown to be involved in mesoderm formation...
AbstractBrachyury plays a key role in mesoderm formation during vertebrate development. Absence of t...
We have investigated the induction of the six Xenopus nodal-related genes, Xnr1-Xnr6, by maternal de...
AbstractThough the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway is known to play key roles during Xenopus axis sp...
Axis formation in Xenopus laevis requires generation of the three primary germ layers, endoderm, mes...
The formation of primitive (embryonic) blood in vertebrates is mediated by spatio-temporally restric...
AbstractZygotic Wnt signaling has been shown to be involved in dorsoventral mesodermal patterning in...
AbstractMultiple factors, including members of the FGF, TGFβ, and Wnt family of proteins, are import...
Mesoderm formation results from an inducing process that requires maternal and zygotic FGF/MAPK and ...
AbstractWnt signaling functions repeatedly during embryonic development to induce different but spec...
AbstractBackground: The Brachyury (T) gene is required for the formation of posterior mesoderm and f...
AbstractCanonical Wnt signals have been implicated in multiple events during early embryogenesis, in...
The development of multicellular organisms relies on extracellular signaling pathways regulating the...
AbstractThe vertebral column is derived from somites, which are transient segments of the paraxial m...
AbstractIn Xenopus, two signaling systems, maternal β-Catenin and Nodal-related, are required for in...
AbstractHomologues of the murine Brachyury gene have been shown to be involved in mesoderm formation...
AbstractBrachyury plays a key role in mesoderm formation during vertebrate development. Absence of t...
We have investigated the induction of the six Xenopus nodal-related genes, Xnr1-Xnr6, by maternal de...
AbstractThough the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway is known to play key roles during Xenopus axis sp...
Axis formation in Xenopus laevis requires generation of the three primary germ layers, endoderm, mes...
The formation of primitive (embryonic) blood in vertebrates is mediated by spatio-temporally restric...
AbstractZygotic Wnt signaling has been shown to be involved in dorsoventral mesodermal patterning in...
AbstractMultiple factors, including members of the FGF, TGFβ, and Wnt family of proteins, are import...