The augmentation of regenerative capability is a powerful method for pursuing for the regulation of degeneration, traumatic injury and cancer. The tadpole, Clinotarsus curtipes and Xenopus laevis is a significant model system for addressing the fundamental regeneration mechanism that enables to understand the key aspects of regeneration medicine. The selected creatures Clinotarsus curtipes and Xenopus laevis could able to obtain both tissue regeneration and scar free healing during larval stage in spite of its predominant loss of such ability during the metamorphic process. Such transient capability associated with the evolutionary correlation with humans creates Clinotarsus curtipes and Xenopus a very good attractive model for uncovering t...
The remarkable regenerative capabilities of amphibians have captured the attention of biologists for...
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank Katarzyna Kania and the Cambridge Institute Genomics Core for their suppor...
AbstractXenopus tadpoles can fully regenerate all major tissue types following tail amputation. TGF-...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022Regeneration requires access to and mobilization of re...
We have employed transgenic methods combined with embryonic grafting to analyse the mechanisms of re...
AbstractWe have investigated the requirement for the FGF and Wnt/beta-catenin pathways for Xenopus t...
Unlike mammals, Xenopus laevis tadpoles have a high regenerative potential. To characterize this reg...
Understanding the molecular mechanisms that promote successful tissue regeneration is critical for c...
The ability to regenerate lost tissue and organs varies among animal species, tissue and life cycle ...
Xenopus laevis provides a valuable model to examine cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in th...
For ages, regeneration has intrigued countless biologists, clinicians, and biomedical engineers. In ...
The recent introduction of high-throughput sequencing techniques rapidly changes our perception of v...
The tadpoles of the frog Xenopus laevis show significant regeneration capacity and are useful models...
Organ regenerative ability depends on the animal species and the developmental stage. The molecular ...
The image features the head of the tadpole of the African clawed frog, Xenopus laevis, from the Ai-S...
The remarkable regenerative capabilities of amphibians have captured the attention of biologists for...
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank Katarzyna Kania and the Cambridge Institute Genomics Core for their suppor...
AbstractXenopus tadpoles can fully regenerate all major tissue types following tail amputation. TGF-...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022Regeneration requires access to and mobilization of re...
We have employed transgenic methods combined with embryonic grafting to analyse the mechanisms of re...
AbstractWe have investigated the requirement for the FGF and Wnt/beta-catenin pathways for Xenopus t...
Unlike mammals, Xenopus laevis tadpoles have a high regenerative potential. To characterize this reg...
Understanding the molecular mechanisms that promote successful tissue regeneration is critical for c...
The ability to regenerate lost tissue and organs varies among animal species, tissue and life cycle ...
Xenopus laevis provides a valuable model to examine cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in th...
For ages, regeneration has intrigued countless biologists, clinicians, and biomedical engineers. In ...
The recent introduction of high-throughput sequencing techniques rapidly changes our perception of v...
The tadpoles of the frog Xenopus laevis show significant regeneration capacity and are useful models...
Organ regenerative ability depends on the animal species and the developmental stage. The molecular ...
The image features the head of the tadpole of the African clawed frog, Xenopus laevis, from the Ai-S...
The remarkable regenerative capabilities of amphibians have captured the attention of biologists for...
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank Katarzyna Kania and the Cambridge Institute Genomics Core for their suppor...
AbstractXenopus tadpoles can fully regenerate all major tissue types following tail amputation. TGF-...