AbstractA Hoxd11/lacZ reporter, expressed with a Hoxd11-like axial expression pattern in transgenic mouse embryos, is stimulated in tailbud fragments when cultured in presence of Gdf11, a TGF-β growth/differentiation factor. The same construct is also stimulated by Gdf11 when transiently transfected into cultures of HepG2 cells. Stimulation of the reporter in HepG2 cells is enhanced where it contains only the 332 bp Hoxd11 enhancer region VIII upstream or downstream of a luciferase or lacZ reporter. This enhancer contains three elements conserved from fish to mice, one of which has the sequence of a Smad3/4 binding element. Mutation of this motif inhibits the ability of Gdf11 to enhance reporter activity in the HepG2 cell assay. Chromatin i...
AbstractTo address the expression and function of Hoxb13, the 5′ most Hox gene in the HoxB cluster, ...
Formation of the vertebrate axial skeleton requires coordinated Hox gene activity. Hox group 6 genes...
Hox genes are well known for their evolutionarily conserved role in patterning the body axis. Now, Y...
AbstractA Hoxd11/lacZ reporter, expressed with a Hoxd11-like axial expression pattern in transgenic ...
During the trunk-to-tail transition, axial progenitors relocate from the epiblast to the tail bud. H...
Growth and differentiation factor 11 (GDF11) is a transforming growth factor β family member that ha...
AbstractTargeted deletion of the gene for GDF11, a novel member of the TGFβ family, has been found t...
AbstractThe precise activation, in space and time, of vertebrateHoxgenes is an essential requirement...
AbstractGDF11, a new member of the TGF-β gene superfamily, regulates anterior/posterior patterning i...
We have used reporter gene constructs to study the cis regulation of the Hoxd-11 gene (previously Ho...
Vertebrate Hox genes are required for the proper organization of structures along the rostrocaudal a...
Hox genes are crucial for body axis specification during embryonic development. Hoxa11 plays a ro...
AbstractThe Hox genes encode a group of transcription factors essential for proper development of th...
AbstractThe development of the vertebrate limb is dependent upon two signaling centers, the apical e...
We previously demonstrated that a ∼1 Mb domain of genes upstream of and including Hoxa13 is co-expre...
AbstractTo address the expression and function of Hoxb13, the 5′ most Hox gene in the HoxB cluster, ...
Formation of the vertebrate axial skeleton requires coordinated Hox gene activity. Hox group 6 genes...
Hox genes are well known for their evolutionarily conserved role in patterning the body axis. Now, Y...
AbstractA Hoxd11/lacZ reporter, expressed with a Hoxd11-like axial expression pattern in transgenic ...
During the trunk-to-tail transition, axial progenitors relocate from the epiblast to the tail bud. H...
Growth and differentiation factor 11 (GDF11) is a transforming growth factor β family member that ha...
AbstractTargeted deletion of the gene for GDF11, a novel member of the TGFβ family, has been found t...
AbstractThe precise activation, in space and time, of vertebrateHoxgenes is an essential requirement...
AbstractGDF11, a new member of the TGF-β gene superfamily, regulates anterior/posterior patterning i...
We have used reporter gene constructs to study the cis regulation of the Hoxd-11 gene (previously Ho...
Vertebrate Hox genes are required for the proper organization of structures along the rostrocaudal a...
Hox genes are crucial for body axis specification during embryonic development. Hoxa11 plays a ro...
AbstractThe Hox genes encode a group of transcription factors essential for proper development of th...
AbstractThe development of the vertebrate limb is dependent upon two signaling centers, the apical e...
We previously demonstrated that a ∼1 Mb domain of genes upstream of and including Hoxa13 is co-expre...
AbstractTo address the expression and function of Hoxb13, the 5′ most Hox gene in the HoxB cluster, ...
Formation of the vertebrate axial skeleton requires coordinated Hox gene activity. Hox group 6 genes...
Hox genes are well known for their evolutionarily conserved role in patterning the body axis. Now, Y...