AbstractMyf5 is a key myogenic determination factor, specifically present at sites of myogenesis. Surprisingly, during mouse development, this gene is also transcribed in restricted areas of the central nervous system, although the Myf5 protein is not detectable. We have investigated the regulation of Myf5 expression in the central nervous system. Using both in ovo electroporation in the chick embryo and transgenesis in the mouse, we show that regulatory sequences that direct neuronal Myf5 transcription are present in a distal element located between −55 and −54.3 Kb from the Myf5 gene. An Oct6/Tst1 binding site is required for embryonic brain expression, and in the Oct6 mutant mouse embryo, Myf5 transcripts are no longer detectable in the ...
AbstractThe expression of myf-5, a key component of myogenic regulatory genes, declines progressivel...
AbstractSkeletal muscle development in the vertebrate embryo critically depends on the myogenic regu...
Resumen del póster presentado al 2nd Meeting of the Portuguese Society for Developmental Biology, ce...
AbstractMyf5 is a key myogenic determination factor, specifically present at sites of myogenesis. Su...
AbstractThe myogenic regulatory factor Myf5 is integral to the initiation and control of skeletal mu...
AbstractThe transcriptional regulation of the Mrf4/Myf5 locus depends on a multitude of enhancers th...
AbstractMyf-5, a member of the family of four muscle-specific basic helix–loop–helix (bHLH) transcri...
AbstractThe myogenic regulatory factors, Mrf4 and Myf5, play a key role in skeletal muscle formation...
Myf5 is the first myogenic regulatory factor to be expressed in the mouse embryo and it determines t...
AbstractMyf-5 is one of four myogenic regulatory factors that play important roles in skeletal muscl...
In developing mouse embryos, MyoD family regulatory genes are expressed specifically in muscle precu...
AbstractGene targeting has indicated that the bHLH transcription factorsMyf-5andMyoDare required for...
AbstractMyf5 is a member of the muscle-specific determination genes and plays a critical role in ske...
The myogenic regulatory factor Myf5 is integral to the initiation and control of skeletal muscle for...
The muscle-specific transcription factors Myf5 and Mrf4 are two of the four myogenic regulatory fact...
AbstractThe expression of myf-5, a key component of myogenic regulatory genes, declines progressivel...
AbstractSkeletal muscle development in the vertebrate embryo critically depends on the myogenic regu...
Resumen del póster presentado al 2nd Meeting of the Portuguese Society for Developmental Biology, ce...
AbstractMyf5 is a key myogenic determination factor, specifically present at sites of myogenesis. Su...
AbstractThe myogenic regulatory factor Myf5 is integral to the initiation and control of skeletal mu...
AbstractThe transcriptional regulation of the Mrf4/Myf5 locus depends on a multitude of enhancers th...
AbstractMyf-5, a member of the family of four muscle-specific basic helix–loop–helix (bHLH) transcri...
AbstractThe myogenic regulatory factors, Mrf4 and Myf5, play a key role in skeletal muscle formation...
Myf5 is the first myogenic regulatory factor to be expressed in the mouse embryo and it determines t...
AbstractMyf-5 is one of four myogenic regulatory factors that play important roles in skeletal muscl...
In developing mouse embryos, MyoD family regulatory genes are expressed specifically in muscle precu...
AbstractGene targeting has indicated that the bHLH transcription factorsMyf-5andMyoDare required for...
AbstractMyf5 is a member of the muscle-specific determination genes and plays a critical role in ske...
The myogenic regulatory factor Myf5 is integral to the initiation and control of skeletal muscle for...
The muscle-specific transcription factors Myf5 and Mrf4 are two of the four myogenic regulatory fact...
AbstractThe expression of myf-5, a key component of myogenic regulatory genes, declines progressivel...
AbstractSkeletal muscle development in the vertebrate embryo critically depends on the myogenic regu...
Resumen del póster presentado al 2nd Meeting of the Portuguese Society for Developmental Biology, ce...