AbstractSteel factor (SLF) and its cognate receptor, c-kit, have been implicated in the generation of melanocytes from migrating neural crest (NC) cells during early vertebrate embryogenesis. However, the source of SLF in the early avian embryo and its precise role in melanogenesis are unclear. We report here that NC cells themselves express and release SLF protein, which in turn acts as an autocrine factor to induce melanogenesis in nearby NC cells. These results indicate that NC cell subpopulations play an active role in the determination of their cell fate and suggest a different developmental role for the embryonic microenvironment than what has been previously proposed
Stem cell factor is essential to the migration and differentiation of melanocytes during embryogenes...
Apart from embryonic stem cells (ESCs) in the blastocyst, neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) in vertebr...
Neural crest cells arise from the ectoderm and are first recognizable as discrete cells in the chick...
AbstractSteel factor (SLF) and its cognate receptor, c-kit, have been implicated in the generation o...
AbstractThePatch(Ph) mutation in the mouse, a deletion that includes the gene for PDGFRα, is a reces...
AbstractStudies of mice containing mutations in the genes for a receptor tyrosine kinase, c-kit, or ...
AbstractThe neural crest is a transient tissue of the vertebrate embryo that gives rise to most prim...
AbstractThe genes that control development of embryonic melanocytes are poorly defined. Although tra...
The neural crest is a multipotent and highly migratory cell type that contributes to many of the def...
AbstractRecent studies show that specification of some neural crest lineages occurs prior to or at t...
The genes that control development of embryonic melanocytes are poorly defined. Although transcripti...
This thesis is concerned with melanocyte differentiation of the neural crest cells in the embryonic...
AbstractNeural crest cells migrate along two pathways in the trunk: the ventral path, between the ne...
AbstractThe neural crest gives rise to glial cells in the peripheral nervous system. Among the perip...
AbstractIn the vertebrate embryo, the neural crest forms transiently in the dorsal neural primordium...
Stem cell factor is essential to the migration and differentiation of melanocytes during embryogenes...
Apart from embryonic stem cells (ESCs) in the blastocyst, neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) in vertebr...
Neural crest cells arise from the ectoderm and are first recognizable as discrete cells in the chick...
AbstractSteel factor (SLF) and its cognate receptor, c-kit, have been implicated in the generation o...
AbstractThePatch(Ph) mutation in the mouse, a deletion that includes the gene for PDGFRα, is a reces...
AbstractStudies of mice containing mutations in the genes for a receptor tyrosine kinase, c-kit, or ...
AbstractThe neural crest is a transient tissue of the vertebrate embryo that gives rise to most prim...
AbstractThe genes that control development of embryonic melanocytes are poorly defined. Although tra...
The neural crest is a multipotent and highly migratory cell type that contributes to many of the def...
AbstractRecent studies show that specification of some neural crest lineages occurs prior to or at t...
The genes that control development of embryonic melanocytes are poorly defined. Although transcripti...
This thesis is concerned with melanocyte differentiation of the neural crest cells in the embryonic...
AbstractNeural crest cells migrate along two pathways in the trunk: the ventral path, between the ne...
AbstractThe neural crest gives rise to glial cells in the peripheral nervous system. Among the perip...
AbstractIn the vertebrate embryo, the neural crest forms transiently in the dorsal neural primordium...
Stem cell factor is essential to the migration and differentiation of melanocytes during embryogenes...
Apart from embryonic stem cells (ESCs) in the blastocyst, neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) in vertebr...
Neural crest cells arise from the ectoderm and are first recognizable as discrete cells in the chick...