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Summary Anatomy Item Literature (2231) Expression Attributions Wiki
XB-ANAT-3282

Papers associated with posterior hypothalamus (and gal.2)

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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 spliceforms mediate early mesoderm and posterior neural tissue formation in Xenopus., Fletcher RB., Development. May 1, 2006; 133 (9): 1703-14.            


Metastasis-associated kinase modulates Wnt signaling to regulate brain patterning and morphogenesis., Kibardin A., Development. August 1, 2006; 133 (15): 2845-54.                    


Kermit 2/XGIPC, an IGF1 receptor interacting protein, is required for IGF signaling in Xenopus eye development., Wu J., Development. September 1, 2006; 133 (18): 3651-60.          


Retinoic acid signalling is required for specification of pronephric cell fate., Cartry J., Dev Biol. November 1, 2006; 299 (1): 35-51.                  


Smurf1 regulates neural patterning and folding in Xenopus embryos by antagonizing the BMP/Smad1 pathway., Alexandrova EM., Dev Biol. November 15, 2006; 299 (2): 398-410.                      


Xenopus Dab2 is required for embryonic angiogenesis., Cheong SM., BMC Dev Biol. December 19, 2006; 6 63.                  


Xenopus glucose transporter 1 (xGLUT1) is required for gastrulation movement in Xenopus laevis., Suzawa K., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2007; 51 (3): 183-90.              


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


Wnt-5A/Ror2 regulate expression of XPAPC through an alternative noncanonical signaling pathway., Schambony A., Dev Cell. May 1, 2007; 12 (5): 779-92.    


Repression of Wnt/beta-catenin signaling in the anterior endoderm is essential for liver and pancreas development., McLin VA., Development. June 1, 2007; 134 (12): 2207-17.            


Vertebrate Ctr1 coordinates morphogenesis and progenitor cell fate and regulates embryonic stem cell differentiation., Haremaki T., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. July 17, 2007; 104 (29): 12029-34.                    


Retinoic acid-mediated patterning of the pre-pancreatic endoderm in Xenopus operates via direct and indirect mechanisms., Pan FC., Mech Dev. August 1, 2007; 124 (7-8): 518-31.      


Xenopus galectin-VIa shows highly specific expression in cement glands and is regulated by canonical Wnt signaling., Michiue T., Gene Expr Patterns. October 1, 2007; 7 (8): 852-7.    


Tsukushi modulates Xnr2, FGF and BMP signaling: regulation of Xenopus germ layer formation., Morris SA., PLoS One. October 10, 2007; 2 (10): e1004.                    


Kremen is required for neural crest induction in Xenopus and promotes LRP6-mediated Wnt signaling., Hassler C., Development. December 1, 2007; 134 (23): 4255-63.      


Retinoic acid metabolizing factor xCyp26c is specifically expressed in neuroectoderm and regulates anterior neural patterning in Xenopus laevis., Tanibe M., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2008; 52 (7): 893-901.                        


The Gata5 target, TGIF2, defines the pancreatic region by modulating BMP signals within the endoderm., Spagnoli FM., Development. February 1, 2008; 135 (3): 451-61.                                                    


The role of FGF signaling in the establishment and maintenance of mesodermal gene expression in Xenopus., Fletcher RB., Dev Dyn. May 1, 2008; 237 (5): 1243-54.            


FoxM1-driven cell division is required for neuronal differentiation in early Xenopus embryos., Ueno H., Development. June 1, 2008; 135 (11): 2023-30.          


Pleiotropic effects in Eya3 knockout mice., Söker T., BMC Dev Biol. June 23, 2008; 8 118.                    


PACSIN2 regulates cell adhesion during gastrulation in Xenopus laevis., Cousin H., Dev Biol. July 1, 2008; 319 (1): 86-99.                                


Mix.1/2-dependent control of FGF availability during gastrulation is essential for pronephros development in Xenopus., Colas A., Dev Biol. August 15, 2008; 320 (2): 351-65.                  


A p38 MAPK-CREB pathway functions to pattern mesoderm in Xenopus., Keren A., Dev Biol. October 1, 2008; 322 (1): 86-94.        


PMesogenin1 and 2 function directly downstream of Xtbx6 in Xenopus somitogenesis and myogenesis., Tazumi S., Dev Dyn. December 1, 2008; 237 (12): 3749-61.        


The Xenopus Bowline/Ripply family proteins negatively regulate the transcriptional activity of T-box transcription factors., Hitachi K., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2009; 53 (4): 631-9.                    


A role for Syndecan-4 in neural induction involving ERK- and PKC-dependent pathways., Kuriyama S., Development. February 1, 2009; 136 (4): 575-84.                    


Involvement of an inner nuclear membrane protein, Nemp1, in Xenopus neural development through an interaction with the chromatin protein BAF., Mamada H., Dev Biol. March 15, 2009; 327 (2): 497-507.            


DeltaNp63 antagonizes p53 to regulate mesoderm induction in Xenopus laevis., Barton CE., Dev Biol. May 1, 2009; 329 (1): 130-9.            


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.              


CDK9/cyclin complexes modulate endoderm induction by direct interaction with Mix.3/mixer., Zhu H., Dev Dyn. June 1, 2009; 238 (6): 1346-57.      


Xmc mediates Xctr1-independent morphogenesis in Xenopus laevis., Haremaki T., Dev Dyn. September 1, 2009; 238 (9): 2382-7.            


Myosin-X is required for cranial neural crest cell migration in Xenopus laevis., Hwang YS., Dev Dyn. October 1, 2009; 238 (10): 2522-9.      


Normal levels of p27 are necessary for somite segmentation and determining pronephric organ size., Naylor RW., Organogenesis. October 1, 2009; 5 (4): 201-10.                                          


Xenopus Rnd1 and Rnd3 GTP-binding proteins are expressed under the control of segmentation clock and required for somite formation., Goda T., Dev Dyn. November 1, 2009; 238 (11): 2867-76.            


Neural ectoderm-secreted FGF initiates the expression of Nkx2.5 in cardiac progenitors via a p38 MAPK/CREB pathway., Keren-Politansky A., Dev Biol. November 15, 2009; 335 (2): 374-84.            


XRASGRP2 is essential for blood vessel formation during Xenopus development., Suzuki K., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2010; 54 (4): 609-15.            


XPteg (Xenopus proximal tubules-expressed gene) is essential for pronephric mesoderm specification and tubulogenesis., Lee SJ., Mech Dev. January 1, 2010; 127 (1-2): 49-61.                  


Zygotic VegT is required for Xenopus paraxial mesoderm formation and is regulated by Nodal signaling and Eomesodermin., Fukuda M., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2010; 54 (1): 81-92.              


Macrophage Wnt7b is critical for kidney repair and regeneration., Lin SL., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. March 2, 2010; 107 (9): 4194-9.      


BCL6 canalizes Notch-dependent transcription, excluding Mastermind-like1 from selected target genes during left-right patterning., Sakano D., Dev Cell. March 16, 2010; 18 (3): 450-62.        


Mesodermal Wnt signaling organizes the neural plate via Meis3., Elkouby YM., Development. May 1, 2010; 137 (9): 1531-41.        


A novel mouse c-fos intronic promoter that responds to CREB and AP-1 is developmentally regulated in vivo., Coulon V., PLoS One. June 21, 2010; 5 (6): e11235.            


ADAM13 induces cranial neural crest by cleaving class B Ephrins and regulating Wnt signaling., Wei S., Dev Cell. August 17, 2010; 19 (2): 345-52.        


Paraxial T-box genes, Tbx6 and Tbx1, are required for cranial chondrogenesis and myogenesis., Tazumi S., Dev Biol. October 15, 2010; 346 (2): 170-80.                                


Prohibitin1 acts as a neural crest specifier in Xenopus development by repressing the transcription factor E2F1., Schneider M., Development. December 1, 2010; 137 (23): 4073-81.                        


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.                  


Antagonistic role of XESR1 and XESR5 in mesoderm formation in Xenopus laevis., Kinoshita T., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2011; 55 (1): 25-31.          


The involvement of Eph-Ephrin signaling in tissue separation and convergence during Xenopus gastrulation movements., Park EC., Dev Biol. February 15, 2011; 350 (2): 441-50.                          


Uracil DNA N-glycosylase promotes assembly of human centromere protein A., Zeitlin SG., PLoS One. March 2, 2011; 6 (3): e17151.                        

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