Somites are blocks of embryonic mesoderm tissue that give rise to skeletal muscle, cartilage, and other connective tissues. The development of different tissues within the somite is influenced by adjacent structures, in particular, the neural tube and notochord. Results of experiments performed in vivo and in vitro suggest that somites contain populations of cells stably programmed to undergo either skeletal myogenesis or chondrogenesis and a population uncommitted to either pathway. The fate of the uncommitted cells would depend on a transfer of information from the committed cells. Communication between committed and uncommitted cells is regulated by cell and tissue interactions that either activate or inhibit this process
Somitogenesis, the primary segmentation of the vertebrate embryo, is associated with oscillating gen...
Somites are transient segments formed in a rostro-caudal progression during vertebrate development. ...
Despite its fundamental importance for development, the question of how organs achieve their correct...
Somites are blocks of embryonic mesoderm tissue that give rise to skeletal muscle, cartilage, and ot...
Somites are blocks of embryonic mesoderm tissue that give rise to skeletal muscle, cartilage, and ot...
AbstractMedial and lateral halves of the somite are known to differ with respect to their developmen...
Somites form during embryonic development and give rise to unique cell and tissue types, such as ske...
Somites form during embryonic development and give rise to unique cell and tissue types, such as ske...
International audienceThe somite is a transient embryonic mesodermal structure, found only in verteb...
AbstractThe organizer has traditionally been considered the major source of somite-inducing signals....
In amniote embryos, the process of segmentation generates epithelialised somites sequentially, in he...
We are still far from understanding somitogenesis as a whole, but there is an emerging picture of th...
AbstractWe have developed an in vitro assay for examining the neural tube/notochord influence on som...
Somites form during embryonic development and give rise to unique cell and tissue types, such as ske...
Somites are paired embryonic segments that form in a regular sequence from unsegmented mesoderm duri...
Somitogenesis, the primary segmentation of the vertebrate embryo, is associated with oscillating gen...
Somites are transient segments formed in a rostro-caudal progression during vertebrate development. ...
Despite its fundamental importance for development, the question of how organs achieve their correct...
Somites are blocks of embryonic mesoderm tissue that give rise to skeletal muscle, cartilage, and ot...
Somites are blocks of embryonic mesoderm tissue that give rise to skeletal muscle, cartilage, and ot...
AbstractMedial and lateral halves of the somite are known to differ with respect to their developmen...
Somites form during embryonic development and give rise to unique cell and tissue types, such as ske...
Somites form during embryonic development and give rise to unique cell and tissue types, such as ske...
International audienceThe somite is a transient embryonic mesodermal structure, found only in verteb...
AbstractThe organizer has traditionally been considered the major source of somite-inducing signals....
In amniote embryos, the process of segmentation generates epithelialised somites sequentially, in he...
We are still far from understanding somitogenesis as a whole, but there is an emerging picture of th...
AbstractWe have developed an in vitro assay for examining the neural tube/notochord influence on som...
Somites form during embryonic development and give rise to unique cell and tissue types, such as ske...
Somites are paired embryonic segments that form in a regular sequence from unsegmented mesoderm duri...
Somitogenesis, the primary segmentation of the vertebrate embryo, is associated with oscillating gen...
Somites are transient segments formed in a rostro-caudal progression during vertebrate development. ...
Despite its fundamental importance for development, the question of how organs achieve their correct...