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Summary Anatomy Item Literature (2785) Expression Attributions Wiki
XB-ANAT-42

Papers associated with neuroectoderm (and foxd4l1.1)

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Alcohol induces neural tube defects by reducing retinoic acid signaling and promoting neural plate expansion., Edri T., Front Cell Dev Biol. January 1, 2023; 11 1282273.                    


Goosecoid Controls Neuroectoderm Specification via Dual Circuits of Direct Repression and Indirect Stimulation in Xenopus Embryos., Umair Z., Mol Cells. October 31, 2021; 44 (10): 723-735.          


Foxd4l1.1 Negatively Regulates Chordin Transcription in Neuroectoderm of Xenopus Gastrula., Kumar V., Cells. October 17, 2021; 10 (10):             


Foxd4l1.1 negatively regulates transcription of neural repressor ventx1.1 during neuroectoderm formation in Xenopus embryos., Kumar S, Kumar S., Sci Rep. October 8, 2020; 10 (1): 16780.            


Pinhead signaling regulates mesoderm heterogeneity via FGF receptor-dependent pathway., Ossipova O., Development. January 1, 2020;                                       


Wbp2nl has a developmental role in establishing neural and non-neural ectodermal fates., Marchak A., Dev Biol. September 1, 2017; 429 (1): 213-224.                    


Nodal/Activin Pathway is a Conserved Neural Induction Signal in Chordates., Le Petillon Y., Nat Ecol Evol. August 1, 2017; 1 (8): 1192-1200.                                


Lineage commitment of embryonic cells involves MEK1-dependent clearance of pluripotency regulator Ventx2., Scerbo P., Elife. June 27, 2017; 6                               


Foxd4 is essential for establishing neural cell fate and for neuronal differentiation., Sherman JH., Genesis. June 1, 2017; 55 (6):   


Brg1 chromatin remodeling ATPase balances germ layer patterning by amplifying the transcriptional burst at midblastula transition., Wagner G., PLoS Genet. May 12, 2017; 13 (5): e1006757.                                    


Pa2G4 is a novel Six1 co-factor that is required for neural crest and otic development., Neilson KM., Dev Biol. January 15, 2017; 421 (2): 171-182.                    


Neural transcription factors bias cleavage stage blastomeres to give rise to neural ectoderm., Gaur S., Genesis. June 1, 2016; 54 (6): 334-49.                          


Early neural ectodermal genes are activated by Siamois and Twin during blastula stages., Klein SL., Genesis. May 1, 2015; 53 (5): 308-20.          


Neural transcription factors: from embryos to neural stem cells., Lee HK., Mol Cells. October 31, 2014; 37 (10): 705-12.    


Occupancy of tissue-specific cis-regulatory modules by Otx2 and TLE/Groucho for embryonic head specification., Yasuoka Y., Nat Commun. July 9, 2014; 5 4322.        


ERF and ETV3L are retinoic acid-inducible repressors required for primary neurogenesis., Janesick A., Development. August 1, 2013; 140 (15): 3095-106.                                                              


On becoming neural: what the embryo can tell us about differentiating neural stem cells., Moody SA., Am J Stem Cells. June 30, 2013; 2 (2): 74-94.              


Conserved structural domains in FoxD4L1, a neural forkhead box transcription factor, are required to repress or activate target genes., Klein SL., PLoS One. April 4, 2013; 8 (4): e61845.                  


Suv4-20h histone methyltransferases promote neuroectodermal differentiation by silencing the pluripotency-associated Oct-25 gene., Nicetto D., PLoS Genet. January 1, 2013; 9 (1): e1003188.                                                                


Specific domains of FoxD4/5 activate and repress neural transcription factor genes to control the progression of immature neural ectoderm to differentiating neural plate., Neilson KM., Dev Biol. May 15, 2012; 365 (2): 363-75.                        


The response of early neural genes to FGF signaling or inhibition of BMP indicate the absence of a conserved neural induction module., Rogers CD., BMC Dev Biol. January 26, 2011; 11 74.        


Microarray identification of novel downstream targets of FoxD4L1/D5, a critical component of the neural ectodermal transcriptional network., Yan B., Dev Dyn. December 1, 2010; 239 (12): 3467-80.                  


Notch signaling downstream of foxD5 promotes neural ectodermal transcription factors that inhibit neural differentiation., Yan B., Dev Dyn. June 1, 2009; 238 (6): 1358-65.        


foxD5 plays a critical upstream role in regulating neural ectodermal fate and the onset of neural differentiation., Yan B., Dev Biol. May 1, 2009; 329 (1): 80-95.              


The competence of Xenopus blastomeres to produce neural and retinal progeny is repressed by two endo-mesoderm promoting pathways., Yan B., Dev Biol. May 1, 2007; 305 (1): 103-19.        


Identification of novel genes affecting mesoderm formation and morphogenesis through an enhanced large scale functional screen in Xenopus., Chen JA., Mech Dev. March 1, 2005; 122 (3): 307-31.                                                                                                                      


Of Fox and Frogs: Fox (fork head/winged helix) transcription factors in Xenopus development., Pohl BS., Gene. January 3, 2005; 344 21-32.      


foxD5a, a Xenopus winged helix gene, maintains an immature neural ectoderm via transcriptional repression that is dependent on the C-terminal domain., Sullivan SA., Dev Biol. April 15, 2001; 232 (2): 439-57.            


Neuroectodermal specification and regionalization of the Spemann organizer in Xenopus., Fetka I., Mech Dev. May 1, 2000; 93 (1-2): 49-58.          


Characterization of a subfamily of related winged helix genes, XFD-12/12'/12" (XFLIP), during Xenopus embryogenesis., Sölter M., Mech Dev. December 1, 1999; 89 (1-2): 161-5.                  

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