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Summary Anatomy Item Literature (3430) Expression Attributions Wiki
XB-ANAT-726

Papers associated with sensory system (and sox3)

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Loss of Xenopus tropicalis EMSY causes impairment of gastrulation and upregulation of p53., Rana AA., N Biotechnol. July 1, 2011; 28 (4): 334-41.                


Xenopus laevis insulin receptor substrate IRS-1 is important for eye development., Bugner V., Dev Dyn. July 1, 2011; 240 (7): 1705-15.            


Peter Pan functions independently of its role in ribosome biogenesis during early eye and craniofacial cartilage development in Xenopus laevis., Bugner V., Development. June 1, 2011; 138 (11): 2369-78.                        


Gadd45a and Gadd45g regulate neural development and exit from pluripotency in Xenopus., Kaufmann LT., Mech Dev. January 1, 2011; 128 (7-10): 401-11.                      


Histone XH2AX is required for Xenopus anterior neural development: critical role of threonine 16 phosphorylation., Lee SY., J Biol Chem. September 17, 2010; 285 (38): 29525-34.                  


Regulation of vertebrate embryogenesis by the exon junction complex core component Eif4a3., Haremaki T., Dev Dyn. July 1, 2010; 239 (7): 1977-87.              


Neural crest migration requires the activity of the extracellular sulphatases XtSulf1 and XtSulf2., Guiral EC., Dev Biol. May 15, 2010; 341 (2): 375-88.                              


FMR1/FXR1 and the miRNA pathway are required for eye and neural crest development., Gessert S., Dev Biol. May 1, 2010; 341 (1): 222-35.                                                              


Cloning and expression analysis of the anterior parahox genes, Gsh1 and Gsh2 from Xenopus tropicalis., Illes JC., Dev Dyn. January 1, 2009; 238 (1): 194-203.                                


Samba, a Xenopus hnRNP expressed in neural and neural crest tissues., Yan CY., Dev Dyn. January 1, 2009; 238 (1): 204-9.      


Evolution of non-coding regulatory sequences involved in the developmental process: reflection of differential employment of paralogous genes as highlighted by Sox2 and group B1 Sox genes., Kamachi Y., Proc Jpn Acad Ser B Phys Biol Sci. January 1, 2009; 85 (2): 55-68.                  


Xenopus BTBD6 and its Drosophila homologue lute are required for neuronal development., Bury FJ., Dev Dyn. November 1, 2008; 237 (11): 3352-60.              


Hairy2 functions through both DNA-binding and non DNA-binding mechanisms at the neural plate border in Xenopus., Nichane M., Dev Biol. October 15, 2008; 322 (2): 368-80.                        


Eya1 and Six1 promote neurogenesis in the cranial placodes in a SoxB1-dependent fashion., Schlosser G., Dev Biol. August 1, 2008; 320 (1): 199-214.                  


Crossveinless-2 Is a BMP feedback inhibitor that binds Chordin/BMP to regulate Xenopus embryonic patterning., Ambrosio AL., Dev Cell. August 1, 2008; 15 (2): 248-60.                            


The lens-regenerating competence in the outer cornea and epidermis of larval Xenopus laevis is related to pax6 expression., Gargioli C., J Anat. May 1, 2008; 212 (5): 612-20.


Sox3 expression is maintained by FGF signaling and restricted to the neural plate by Vent proteins in the Xenopus embryo., Rogers CD., Dev Biol. January 1, 2008; 313 (1): 307-19.                  


Neural induction requires continued suppression of both Smad1 and Smad2 signals during gastrulation., Chang C., Development. November 1, 2007; 134 (21): 3861-72.                


PP2A:B56epsilon is required for eye induction and eye field separation., Rorick AM., Dev Biol. February 15, 2007; 302 (2): 477-93.                  


FoxN3 is required for craniofacial and eye development of Xenopus laevis., Schuff M., Dev Dyn. January 1, 2007; 236 (1): 226-39.                            


An NF-kappaB and slug regulatory loop active in early vertebrate mesoderm., Zhang C., PLoS One. December 27, 2006; 1 e106.                        


Expression of Sox1 during Xenopus early embryogenesis., Nitta KR., Biochem Biophys Res Commun. December 8, 2006; 351 (1): 287-93.            


Isolation and characterization of a novel gene, xMADML, involved in Xenopus laevis eye development., Elkins MB., Dev Dyn. July 1, 2006; 235 (7): 1845-57.                  


Tes regulates neural crest migration and axial elongation in Xenopus., Dingwell KS., Dev Biol. May 1, 2006; 293 (1): 252-67.                          


Mxi1 is essential for neurogenesis in Xenopus and acts by bridging the pan-neural and proneural genes., Klisch TJ., Dev Biol. April 15, 2006; 292 (2): 470-85.                


FGF8, Wnt8 and Myf5 are target genes of Tbx6 during anteroposterior specification in Xenopus embryo., Li HY., Dev Biol. February 15, 2006; 290 (2): 470-81.                    


A dominant-negative form of the E3 ubiquitin ligase Cullin-1 disrupts the correct allocation of cell fate in the neural crest lineage., Voigt J., Development. February 1, 2006; 133 (3): 559-68.      


Tissues and signals involved in the induction of placodal Six1 expression in Xenopus laevis., Ahrens K., Dev Biol. December 1, 2005; 288 (1): 40-59.            


Depletion of Bmp2, Bmp4, Bmp7 and Spemann organizer signals induces massive brain formation in Xenopus embryos., Reversade B., Development. August 1, 2005; 132 (15): 3381-92.            


Xenopus Id3 is required downstream of Myc for the formation of multipotent neural crest progenitor cells., Light W., Development. April 1, 2005; 132 (8): 1831-41.              


Inhibition of neurogenesis by SRp38, a neuroD-regulated RNA-binding protein., Liu KJ, Liu KJ., Development. April 1, 2005; 132 (7): 1511-23.                


Expression cloning screening of a unique and full-length set of cDNA clones is an efficient method for identifying genes involved in Xenopus neurogenesis., Voigt J., Mech Dev. March 1, 2005; 122 (3): 289-306.                                            


Global analysis of RAR-responsive genes in the Xenopus neurula using cDNA microarrays., Arima K., Dev Dyn. February 1, 2005; 232 (2): 414-31.                          


Systematic screening for genes specifically expressed in the anterior neuroectoderm during early Xenopus development., Takahashi N., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2005; 49 (8): 939-51.                                    


A Xenopus tribbles orthologue is required for the progression of mitosis and for development of the nervous system., Saka Y., Dev Biol. September 15, 2004; 273 (2): 210-25.                      


Molecular anatomy of placode development in Xenopus laevis., Schlosser G., Dev Biol. July 15, 2004; 271 (2): 439-66.                          


Inhibition of the cell cycle is required for convergent extension of the paraxial mesoderm during Xenopus neurulation., Leise WF., Development. April 1, 2004; 131 (8): 1703-15.              


Morphogenetic movements underlying eye field formation require interactions between the FGF and ephrinB1 signaling pathways., Moore KB., Dev Cell. January 1, 2004; 6 (1): 55-67.                


Wise, a context-dependent activator and inhibitor of Wnt signalling., Itasaki N., Development. September 1, 2003; 130 (18): 4295-305.                


Xenopus X-box binding protein 1, a leucine zipper transcription factor, is involved in the BMP signaling pathway., Zhao H., Dev Biol. May 15, 2003; 257 (2): 278-91.          


Depletion of the cell-cycle inhibitor p27(Xic1) impairs neuronal differentiation and increases the number of ElrC(+) progenitor cells in Xenopus tropicalis., Carruthers S., Mech Dev. May 1, 2003; 120 (5): 607-16.            


Expression of Sox3 throughout the developing central nervous system is dependent on the combined action of discrete, evolutionarily conserved regulatory elements., Brunelli S., Genesis. May 1, 2003; 36 (1): 12-24.    


Sequence and expression of FoxB2 (XFD-5) and FoxI1c (XFD-10) in Xenopus embryogenesis., Pohl BS., Mech Dev. September 1, 2002; 117 (1-2): 283-7.        


Characterizing gene expression during lens formation in Xenopus laevis: evaluating the model for embryonic lens induction., Henry JJ., Dev Dyn. June 1, 2002; 224 (2): 168-85.        


Transcription factors of the anterior neural plate alter cell movements of epidermal progenitors to specify a retinal fate., Kenyon KL., Dev Biol. December 1, 2001; 240 (1): 77-91.          


Transgenic Xenopus embryos reveal that anterior neural development requires continued suppression of BMP signaling after gastrulation., Hartley KO., Dev Biol. October 1, 2001; 238 (1): 168-84.                


XCL-2 is a novel m-type calpain and disrupts morphogenetic movements during embryogenesis in Xenopus laevis., Cao Y., Dev Growth Differ. October 1, 2001; 43 (5): 563-71.              


Xenopus cadherin-11 restrains cranial neural crest migration and influences neural crest specification., Borchers A., Development. August 1, 2001; 128 (16): 3049-60.                      


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.            


Distinct roles of maf genes during Xenopus lens development., Ishibashi S., Mech Dev. March 1, 2001; 101 (1-2): 155-66.          

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