AbstractVertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inductive signals from midline tissues [1, 2]. Subsequent myotome growth occurs by the addition of new muscle fibers. We show that in zebrafish new slow-muscle fibers are first added at the end of the segmentation period in growth zones near the dorsal and ventral extremes of the myotome, and this muscle growth continues into larval life. In marine teleosts, this mechanism of growth has been termed stratified hyperplasia [3]. We have tested whether these added fibers require an embryonic architecture of muscle fibers to support their development and whether their fate is regulated by the same mechanisms that regulate embryonic muscle fates. Although...
AbstractIt is well known that slow and fast muscles are used for long-term sustained movement and sh...
AbstractAs the vertebrate myotome is generated, myogenic precursor cells undergo extensive and coord...
AbstractSkeletal muscles of vertebrates are typically composed of slow- and fast-twitch fibers that ...
Vertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inductive signa...
AbstractVertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inducti...
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...
AbstractThe most obvious segmental structures in the vertebrate embryo are somites: transient struct...
The development and growth of vertebrate axial muscle have been studied for decades at both the desc...
Three phases of myogenesis have been identified in the myotomal muscles of larval teleosts. The comm...
AbstractSkeletal muscle comes in two fundamental flavours, slow and fast, which determine physiologi...
In tetrapod phylogeny, the dramatic modifications of the trunk have received less attention than the...
AbstractSharp borders between cells with different developmental fates are important for patterning ...
<div><p>One of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivalent potential—a...
One of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivalent potentiala??an equi...
AbstractIt is well known that slow and fast muscles are used for long-term sustained movement and sh...
AbstractAs the vertebrate myotome is generated, myogenic precursor cells undergo extensive and coord...
AbstractSkeletal muscles of vertebrates are typically composed of slow- and fast-twitch fibers that ...
Vertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inductive signa...
AbstractVertebrate muscle development begins with the patterning of the paraxial mesoderm by inducti...
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...
AbstractThe most obvious segmental structures in the vertebrate embryo are somites: transient struct...
The development and growth of vertebrate axial muscle have been studied for decades at both the desc...
Three phases of myogenesis have been identified in the myotomal muscles of larval teleosts. The comm...
AbstractSkeletal muscle comes in two fundamental flavours, slow and fast, which determine physiologi...
In tetrapod phylogeny, the dramatic modifications of the trunk have received less attention than the...
AbstractSharp borders between cells with different developmental fates are important for patterning ...
<div><p>One of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivalent potential—a...
One of the central questions of developmental biology is how cells of equivalent potentiala??an equi...
AbstractIt is well known that slow and fast muscles are used for long-term sustained movement and sh...
AbstractAs the vertebrate myotome is generated, myogenic precursor cells undergo extensive and coord...
AbstractSkeletal muscles of vertebrates are typically composed of slow- and fast-twitch fibers that ...