نتایج جستجو برای: ژن های hox

تعداد نتایج: 485225  

Journal: :Genome research 2001
A L Hughes J da Silva R Friedman

The fact that there are four homeobox (Hox) clusters in most vertebrates but only one in invertebrates is often cited as evidence for the hypothesis that two rounds of genome duplication by polyploidization occurred early in vertebrate history. In addition, it has been observed in humans and other mammals that numerous gene families include paralogs on two or more of the four Hox-bearing chromo...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2007
Gaëll Mainguy Jan Koster Joost Woltering Hans Jansen Antony Durston

The Hox clusters play a crucial role in body patterning during animal development. They encode both Hox transcription factor and micro-RNA genes that are activated in a precise temporal and spatial sequence that follows their chromosomal order. These remarkable collinear properties confer functional unit status for Hox clusters. We developed the TranscriptView platform to establish high resolut...

Journal: :Current Biology 2006
Kai Kamm Bernd Schierwater Wolfgang Jakob Stephen L. Dellaporta David J. Miller

Across the animal kingdom, Hox genes are organized in clusters whose genomic organization reflects their central roles in patterning along the anterior/posterior (A/P) axis . While a cluster of Hox genes was present in the bilaterian common ancestor, the origins of this system remain unclear (cf. ). With new data for two representatives of the closest extant phylum to the Bilateria, the sea ane...

Journal: :Development 1997
S K Chan H D Ryoo A Gould R Krumlauf R S Mann

The homeodomain proteins encoded by the Hox complex genes do not bind DNA with high specificity. In vitro, Hox specificity can be increased by binding to DNA cooperatively with the homeodomain protein extradenticle or its vertebrate homologs, the pbx proteins (together, the PBC family). Here we show that a two basepair change in a Hox-PBC binding site switches the Hox-dependent expression patte...

Journal: :Endocrine reviews 2006
Gaurang S Daftary Hugh S Taylor

Hox genes have a well-characterized role in embryonic development, where they determine identity along the anteroposterior body axis. Hox genes are expressed not only during embryogenesis but also in the adult, where they are necessary for functional differentiation. Despite the known function of these genes as transcription factors, few regulatory mechanisms that drive Hox expression are known...

2014
Richard Morgan Angie Boxall Kevin J Harrington Guy R Simpson Agnieszka Michael Hardev S Pandha

BACKGROUND The HOX genes are a family of transcription factors that help to determine cell and tissue identity during early development, and which are also over-expressed in a number of malignancies where they have been shown to promote cell proliferation and survival. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the expression of HOX genes in prostate cancer and to establish whether prostate canc...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 1992

Journal: :genetics in the 3rd millennium 0
seyed mehdi kalantar vida mokhtari

homeobox (hox) genes are contributed in the genetic control of development of the body plan, pattern formation, and cell fate determination and the other several key developmental processes. hox genes are also known as selector genes because expression within a given section of the embryo will cause its cells to choose a particular developmental path. hox genes encode transcription factors that...

Journal: :Developmental biology 2009
Joost M Woltering Freek J Vonk Hendrik Müller Nabila Bardine Ioana L Tuduce Merijn A G de Bakker Walter Knöchel I Ovidiu Sirbu Antony J Durston Michael K Richardson

It is generally assumed that the characteristic deregionalized body plan of species with a snake-like morphology evolved through a corresponding homogenization of Hox gene expression domains along the primary axis. Here, we examine the expression of Hox genes in snake embryos and show that a collinear pattern of Hox expression is retained within the paraxial mesoderm of the trunk. Genes express...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2003
Wim d Graaff Daihachiro Tomotsune Tony Oosterveen Yoshihiro Takihara Haruhiko Koseki Jacqueline Deschamps

Polycomb-group (Pc-G) proteins ensure late maintenance of transcriptional repression outside the expression domain of target genes in flies and vertebrates. They act in complexes, presumably by modulating chromatin structure. In Drosophila, they have been found to be associated with transcriptionally inactive loci but seem to be present in association with actively transcribed promoters as well...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید