AbstractMany lophotrochozoans (i.e., molluscs, annelids, nemerteans, and polyclad flatworms) display a well-conserved early developmental program called spiral cleavage that contrasts with the high diversity of adult body forms present in this group. Due to this stereotypical development, each cell can be uniquely identified and its lineage history known following intracellular injection of lineage tracers. Cell deletion experiments performed mainly in molluscs have demonstrated that one or two cells associated with the endomesodermal lineage represent an embryonic organizer of subsequent development and are causally involved in cell fate and body patterning. Utilizing the published fate map of the spiral-cleaving annelid Capitella teleta, ...
AbstractCtenophores are marine invertebrates that develop rapidly and directly into juvenile adults....
Abstract Background Diverse architectures of nervous systems (NSs) such as a plexus in cnidarians or...
Bryozoans and brachiopods are sessile, mostly marine animals, that use an elegant crown of tentacles...
Spiralian development is characterized by stereotypic cell geometry and spindle orientation in early...
AbstractThe super-phylum Lophotrochozoa contains the plurality of extant animal phyla and exhibits a...
AbstractThe stereotypic cleavage pattern shared by spiralian embryos provides unique opportunities t...
AbstractSpiralian development is shared by several protostome phyla and characterized by regularitie...
At least five animal phyla exhibit spiralian development, which is characterized by striking similar...
AbstractLineage tracers were injected into individual blastomeres in embryos of the indirect-develop...
AbstractAcoel embryos exhibit a unique form of development that some investigators argue is related ...
AbstractEvolutionary modifications in the origins and organization of the mesoderm represent signifi...
AbstractWe investigated the early development of the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis, an emerging...
BACKGROUND: Spiral cleavage is a conserved, early developmental mode found in several phyla of Lopho...
One of the major questions in evolutionary biology is, how changes in development over time result i...
AbstractIntertaxonomic comparisons are important for understanding neurogenesis and evolution of ner...
AbstractCtenophores are marine invertebrates that develop rapidly and directly into juvenile adults....
Abstract Background Diverse architectures of nervous systems (NSs) such as a plexus in cnidarians or...
Bryozoans and brachiopods are sessile, mostly marine animals, that use an elegant crown of tentacles...
Spiralian development is characterized by stereotypic cell geometry and spindle orientation in early...
AbstractThe super-phylum Lophotrochozoa contains the plurality of extant animal phyla and exhibits a...
AbstractThe stereotypic cleavage pattern shared by spiralian embryos provides unique opportunities t...
AbstractSpiralian development is shared by several protostome phyla and characterized by regularitie...
At least five animal phyla exhibit spiralian development, which is characterized by striking similar...
AbstractLineage tracers were injected into individual blastomeres in embryos of the indirect-develop...
AbstractAcoel embryos exhibit a unique form of development that some investigators argue is related ...
AbstractEvolutionary modifications in the origins and organization of the mesoderm represent signifi...
AbstractWe investigated the early development of the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis, an emerging...
BACKGROUND: Spiral cleavage is a conserved, early developmental mode found in several phyla of Lopho...
One of the major questions in evolutionary biology is, how changes in development over time result i...
AbstractIntertaxonomic comparisons are important for understanding neurogenesis and evolution of ner...
AbstractCtenophores are marine invertebrates that develop rapidly and directly into juvenile adults....
Abstract Background Diverse architectures of nervous systems (NSs) such as a plexus in cnidarians or...
Bryozoans and brachiopods are sessile, mostly marine animals, that use an elegant crown of tentacles...