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

Papers associated with sensory system (and gsc)

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Ectopic Hoxa2 induction after neural crest migration results in homeosis of jaw elements in Xenopus., Pasqualetti M., Development. December 1, 2000; 127 (24): 5367-78.          


Molecular mechanisms of cell-cell signaling by the Spemann-Mangold organizer., De Robertis EM., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2001; 45 (1): 189-97.        


Phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase acts in parallel to the ERK MAP kinase in the FGF pathway during Xenopus mesoderm induction., Carballada R., Development. January 1, 2001; 128 (1): 35-44.            


Neural induction in the absence of mesoderm: beta-catenin-dependent expression of secreted BMP antagonists at the blastula stage in Xenopus., Wessely O., Dev Biol. June 1, 2001; 234 (1): 161-73.              


Overexpression of camello, a member of a novel protein family, reduces blastomere adhesion and inhibits gastrulation in Xenopus laevis., Popsueva AE., Dev Biol. June 15, 2001; 234 (2): 483-96.                


Goosecoid promotes head organizer activity by direct repression of Xwnt8 in Spemann's organizer., Yao J., Development. August 1, 2001; 128 (15): 2975-87.              


Siamois functions in the early blastula to induce Spemann's organiser., Kodjabachian L., Mech Dev. October 1, 2001; 108 (1-2): 71-9.          


Expression cloning of Xenopus Os4, an evolutionarily conserved gene, which induces mesoderm and dorsal axis., Zohn IE., Dev Biol. November 1, 2001; 239 (1): 118-31.                    


otx2 expression in the ectoderm activates anterior neural determination and is required for Xenopus cement gland formation., Gammill LS., Dev Biol. December 1, 2001; 240 (1): 223-36.              


From intestine to muscle: nuclear reprogramming through defective cloned embryos., Byrne JA., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. April 30, 2002; 99 (9): 6059-63.            


The latent-TGFbeta-binding-protein-1 (LTBP-1) is expressed in the organizer and regulates nodal and activin signaling., Altmann CR., Dev Biol. August 1, 2002; 248 (1): 118-27.                  


Role of 14-3-3 proteins in early Xenopus development., Wu C., Mech Dev. November 1, 2002; 119 (1): 45-54.            


Xhex-expressing endodermal tissues are essential for anterior patterning in Xenopus., Smithers LE., Mech Dev. December 1, 2002; 119 (2): 191-200.            


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.          


Selective degradation of excess Ldb1 by Rnf12/RLIM confers proper Ldb1 expression levels and Xlim-1/Ldb1 stoichiometry in Xenopus organizer functions., Hiratani I., Development. September 1, 2003; 130 (17): 4161-75.                    


Twisted gastrulation loss-of-function analyses support its role as a BMP inhibitor during early Xenopus embryogenesis., Blitz IL., Development. October 1, 2003; 130 (20): 4975-88.              


Glypican 4 modulates FGF signalling and regulates dorsoventral forebrain patterning in Xenopus embryos., Galli A., Development. October 1, 2003; 130 (20): 4919-29.              


Lefty blocks a subset of TGFbeta signals by antagonizing EGF-CFC coreceptors., Cheng SK., PLoS Biol. February 1, 2004; 2 (2): E30.                  


Induction of tooth and eye by transplantation of activin A-treated, undifferentiated presumptive ectodermal Xenopus cells into the abdomen., Myoishi Y., Int J Dev Biol. December 1, 2004; 48 (10): 1105-12.


Neural induction in Xenopus requires early FGF signalling in addition to BMP inhibition., Delaune E., Development. January 1, 2005; 132 (2): 299-310.                    


XPACE4 is a localized pro-protein convertase required for mesoderm induction and the cleavage of specific TGFbeta proteins in Xenopus development., Birsoy B., Development. February 1, 2005; 132 (3): 591-602.                      


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


The ARID domain protein dril1 is necessary for TGF(beta) signaling in Xenopus embryos., Callery EM., Dev Biol. February 15, 2005; 278 (2): 542-59.                              


JNK and ROKalpha function in the noncanonical Wnt/RhoA signaling pathway to regulate Xenopus convergent extension movements., Kim GH., Dev Dyn. April 1, 2005; 232 (4): 958-68.  


Frodo proteins: modulators of Wnt signaling in vertebrate development., Brott BK., Differentiation. September 1, 2005; 73 (7): 323-9.      


The assembly of POSH-JNK regulates Xenopus anterior neural development., Kim GH., Dev Biol. October 1, 2005; 286 (1): 256-69.      


Novel Daple-like protein positively regulates both the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway and the Wnt/JNK pathway in Xenopus., Kobayashi H., Mech Dev. October 1, 2005; 122 (10): 1138-53.                      


Maternal Xenopus Zic2 negatively regulates Nodal-related gene expression during anteroposterior patterning., Houston DW., Development. November 1, 2005; 132 (21): 4845-55.              


Role of crescent in convergent extension movements by modulating Wnt signaling in early Xenopus embryogenesis., Shibata M., Mech Dev. December 1, 2005; 122 (12): 1322-39.                    


Genomic profiling of mixer and Sox17beta targets during Xenopus endoderm development., Dickinson K., Dev Dyn. February 1, 2006; 235 (2): 368-81.                        


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 Serpin family gene, protease nexin-1 has an activity distinct from protease inhibition in early Xenopus embryos., Onuma Y., Mech Dev. June 1, 2006; 123 (6): 463-71.        


Novel gene ashwin functions in Xenopus cell survival and anteroposterior patterning., Patil SS., Dev Dyn. July 1, 2006; 235 (7): 1895-907.                            


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.          


FoxD3 regulation of Nodal in the Spemann organizer is essential for Xenopus dorsal mesoderm development., Steiner AB., Development. December 1, 2006; 133 (24): 4827-38.                    


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.                  


The evolutionally conserved activity of Dapper2 in antagonizing TGF-beta signaling., Su Y., FASEB J. March 1, 2007; 21 (3): 682-90.


CHD4/Mi-2beta activity is required for the positioning of the mesoderm/neuroectoderm boundary in Xenopus., Linder B., Genes Dev. April 15, 2007; 21 (8): 973-83.            


Early molecular effects of ethanol during vertebrate embryogenesis., Yelin R., Differentiation. June 1, 2007; 75 (5): 393-403.                    


ANR5, an FGF target gene product, regulates gastrulation in Xenopus., Chung HA., Curr Biol. June 5, 2007; 17 (11): 932-9.                  


The opposing homeobox genes Goosecoid and Vent1/2 self-regulate Xenopus patterning., Sander V., EMBO J. June 20, 2007; 26 (12): 2955-65.              


Lrig3 regulates neural crest formation in Xenopus by modulating Fgf and Wnt signaling pathways., Zhao H., Development. April 1, 2008; 135 (7): 1283-93.                            


The mych gene is required for neural crest survival during zebrafish development., Hong SK., PLoS One. April 9, 2008; 3 (4): e2029.                


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.                            


Robust stability of the embryonic axial pattern requires a secreted scaffold for chordin degradation., Inomata H., Cell. September 5, 2008; 134 (5): 854-65.                  


Retinoid signaling can repress blastula Wnt signaling and impair dorsal development in Xenopus embryo., Li S., Differentiation. October 1, 2008; 76 (8): 897-907.            


Ethanol induces embryonic malformations by competing for retinaldehyde dehydrogenase activity during vertebrate gastrulation., Kot-Leibovich H., Dis Model Mech. January 1, 2009; 2 (5-6): 295-305.    


Retinol dehydrogenase 10 is a feedback regulator of retinoic acid signalling during axis formation and patterning of the central nervous system., Strate I., Development. February 1, 2009; 136 (3): 461-72.                

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