AbstractThe complex, partially redundant gene regulatory architecture underlying vertebrate heart formation has been difficult to characterize. Here, we dissect the primary cardiac gene regulatory network in the invertebrate chordate, Ciona intestinalis. The Ciona heart progenitor lineage is first specified by Fibroblast Growth Factor/Map Kinase (FGF/MapK) activation of the transcription factor Ets1/2 (Ets). Through microarray analysis of sorted heart progenitor cells, we identified the complete set of primary genes upregulated by FGF/Ets shortly after heart progenitor emergence. Combinatorial sequence analysis of these co-regulated genes generated a hypothetical regulatory code consisting of Ets binding sites associated with a specific co-...
AbstractAnimal development is controlled by gene regulation networks that are composed of sequence-s...
AbstractTemporally and spatially co-expressed genes are expected to be regulated by common transcrip...
AbstractThe vertebrate heart develops from two distinct lineages of cardiomyocytes that arise from t...
AbstractThe complex, partially redundant gene regulatory architecture underlying vertebrate heart fo...
Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling and downstream activation of the transcription factor ETS1/...
Defects in the initial establishment of cardiogenic cell fate are likely to contribute to pervasive ...
AbstractGATA family transcription factors are core components of the vertebrate heart gene network. ...
The draft genome of the primitive chordate, Ciona intestinalis, was published three years ago. Since...
Activation of the transcription factor Ets1/2 through FGF signaling is known to specify heart precur...
Ciona intestinalis is an important model for studying the genetic and cellular basis of heart develo...
Mutations to gene regulatory networks drive evolutionary adaptation, but mutations can also occur wi...
Cardiac cell specification and the genetic determinants that govern this process are highly conserve...
The bloom of genomic data has revealed a vast amount of gene losses across all life kingdoms. Howeve...
AbstractFormation of the heart is dependent on an intricate cascade of developmental decisions. Anal...
During the phylotypic period, embryos from different genera show similar gene expression patterns, i...
AbstractAnimal development is controlled by gene regulation networks that are composed of sequence-s...
AbstractTemporally and spatially co-expressed genes are expected to be regulated by common transcrip...
AbstractThe vertebrate heart develops from two distinct lineages of cardiomyocytes that arise from t...
AbstractThe complex, partially redundant gene regulatory architecture underlying vertebrate heart fo...
Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling and downstream activation of the transcription factor ETS1/...
Defects in the initial establishment of cardiogenic cell fate are likely to contribute to pervasive ...
AbstractGATA family transcription factors are core components of the vertebrate heart gene network. ...
The draft genome of the primitive chordate, Ciona intestinalis, was published three years ago. Since...
Activation of the transcription factor Ets1/2 through FGF signaling is known to specify heart precur...
Ciona intestinalis is an important model for studying the genetic and cellular basis of heart develo...
Mutations to gene regulatory networks drive evolutionary adaptation, but mutations can also occur wi...
Cardiac cell specification and the genetic determinants that govern this process are highly conserve...
The bloom of genomic data has revealed a vast amount of gene losses across all life kingdoms. Howeve...
AbstractFormation of the heart is dependent on an intricate cascade of developmental decisions. Anal...
During the phylotypic period, embryos from different genera show similar gene expression patterns, i...
AbstractAnimal development is controlled by gene regulation networks that are composed of sequence-s...
AbstractTemporally and spatially co-expressed genes are expected to be regulated by common transcrip...
AbstractThe vertebrate heart develops from two distinct lineages of cardiomyocytes that arise from t...