The epidermis of the skin is a self-renewing, stratified epithelium that functions as the interface between the human body and the outer environment, and acts as a barrier to water loss. Components of intercellular junctions, such as Claudins, are critical to maintain tissue integrity and water retention. p63 is a transcription factor essential for proliferation of stem cells and for stratification in epithelia, mutated in human heredity syndromes characterized by ectodermal dysplasia. Both p63 and Claudin-1 null mice die wihin few hours from birth due to dehydration from severe skin abnormalities. These observations suggested the possibility that these two genes might be linked in one regulatory pathway with p63 possibly regulating Claudin...
The epidermis, the outer layer of the skin composed of keratinocytes, develops following the action ...
The transcription factor p63 is essential for the formation of the epidermis and other stratifying e...
The transcription factor p63 plays a pivotal role in the development and differentiation of the epid...
The epidermis of the skin is a self-renewing, stratified epithelium that functions as the interface ...
The mammalian skin provides a necessary barrier between the organism and the environment, defending ...
As the outermost tissue of the body, the epidermis is the first physical barrier for any pressure, s...
The barrier function of the skin protects the mammalian body against infection, dehydration, UV irra...
The barrier function of the skin protects the mammalian body against infection, dehydration, UV irra...
Item does not contain fulltextThe transcription factor p63 belongs to the p53 family and is a key re...
Forming and maintaining an intact epidermal permeability barrier (EPB) is necessary to mammalian hea...
One single gene, p63, coding for a developmentally regulated transcription factor, causes three huma...
p63 is a crucial regulator of epidermal development, but its transcriptional control has remained el...
Epidermal development requires the transcription factor p63, as p63-/- mice are born dead, without s...
Contains fulltext : 200262.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Transcription f...
mice complemented with TAp63; p63-/-;ΔN, p63 knockout mice complemented with ΔNp63; p63-/-;TA;ΔN, p6...
The epidermis, the outer layer of the skin composed of keratinocytes, develops following the action ...
The transcription factor p63 is essential for the formation of the epidermis and other stratifying e...
The transcription factor p63 plays a pivotal role in the development and differentiation of the epid...
The epidermis of the skin is a self-renewing, stratified epithelium that functions as the interface ...
The mammalian skin provides a necessary barrier between the organism and the environment, defending ...
As the outermost tissue of the body, the epidermis is the first physical barrier for any pressure, s...
The barrier function of the skin protects the mammalian body against infection, dehydration, UV irra...
The barrier function of the skin protects the mammalian body against infection, dehydration, UV irra...
Item does not contain fulltextThe transcription factor p63 belongs to the p53 family and is a key re...
Forming and maintaining an intact epidermal permeability barrier (EPB) is necessary to mammalian hea...
One single gene, p63, coding for a developmentally regulated transcription factor, causes three huma...
p63 is a crucial regulator of epidermal development, but its transcriptional control has remained el...
Epidermal development requires the transcription factor p63, as p63-/- mice are born dead, without s...
Contains fulltext : 200262.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Transcription f...
mice complemented with TAp63; p63-/-;ΔN, p63 knockout mice complemented with ΔNp63; p63-/-;TA;ΔN, p6...
The epidermis, the outer layer of the skin composed of keratinocytes, develops following the action ...
The transcription factor p63 is essential for the formation of the epidermis and other stratifying e...
The transcription factor p63 plays a pivotal role in the development and differentiation of the epid...