نتایج جستجو برای: limb bud cells

تعداد نتایج: 1455027  

Journal: :acta medica iranica 0
fatemeh davari tanha department of obstetric and gynecology, mirza kochak-khan hospital, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran. farzaneh mirzaaghaee department of obstetric and gynecology, mirza kochak-khan hospital, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran. marzie karimi khezri department of obstetric and gynecology, mirza kochak-khan hospital, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran. mahbod kaveh department of obstetric and gynecology, mirza kochak-khan hospital, tehran university of medical sciences, tehran, iran.

limb bud first appears during the third week of gestation with the upper limb buds appearing a few days before the lower limb buds. complete absence of one or more limbs, called amelia, occurs prior to the eighth week of gestation. we report a case of amelia in a twin gestation.

Journal: :Mechanisms of Development 2006
Caroline W. Beck Bea Christen Donna Barker Jonathan M.W. Slack

Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signalling is necessary for both the development of the tail bud and for tail regeneration in Xenopus laevis tadpoles. Using a stable transgenic line in which expression of the soluble BMP inhibitor noggin is under the control of the temperature inducible hsp70 promoter, we have investigated the timing of the requirement for BMP signalling during tail regenerati...

Journal: :Developmental biology 2012
David A F Loebel Angelyn C C Hor Heidi Bildsoe Vanessa Jones You-Tzung Chen Richard R Behringer Patrick P L Tam

Development of the mouse forelimb bud depends on normal Twist1 activity. Global loss of Twist1 function before limb bud formation stops limb development and loss of Twist1 throughout the mesenchyme after limb bud initiation leads to polydactyly, the ulnarization or loss of the radius and malformations and reductions of the shoulder girdle. Here we show that conditional deletion of Twist1 by Mes...

Journal: :Development 1988
D M Fekete J P Brockes

Adult urodele amphibians can regenerate their limbs after amputation by a process that requires the presence of axons at the amputation plane. Paradoxically, if the limb develops in the near absence of nerves (the 'aneurogenic' limb) it can subsequently regenerate in a nerve-independent fashion. The growth zone (blastema) of regenerating limbs normally contains progenitor cells whose division i...

Journal: :Development 1988
C Thaller G Eichele

Retinoids (vitamin A derivatives) have been shown to have striking effects on developing and regenerating vertebrate limbs. In the developing chick limb, retinoic acid is a candidate morphogen that may coordinate the pattern of cellular differentiation along the anteroposterior limb axis. We describe a series of investigations of the metabolic pathway of retinoids in the chick limb bud system. ...

Journal: :Development 2007
Kosei Sato Yutaka Koizumi Masanori Takahashi Atsushi Kuroiwa Koji Tamura

Pattern formation along the proximal-distal (PD) axis in the developing limb bud serves as a good model for learning how cell fate and regionalization of domains, which are essential processes in morphogenesis during development, are specified by positional information. In the present study, detailed fate maps for the limb bud of the chick embryo were constructed in order to gain insights into ...

2017
Manabu Kawata Yuki Taniguchi Daisuke Mori Fumiko Yano Shinsuke Ohba Ung-Il Chung Tomomi Shimogori Alea A Mills Sakae Tanaka Taku Saito

The apical ectodermal ridge (AER), located at the distal end of each limb bud, is a key signaling center which controls outgrowth and patterning of the proximal-distal axis of the limb through secretion of various molecules. Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs), particularly Fgf8 and Fgf4, are representative molecules produced by AER cells, and essential to maintain the AER and cell proliferation i...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2006
J G M Thewissen M J Cohn L S Stevens S Bajpai J Heyning W E Horton

Among mammals, modern cetaceans (whales, dolphins, and porpoises) are unusual in the absence of hind limbs. However, cetacean embryos do initiate hind-limb bud development. In dolphins, the bud arrests and degenerates around the fifth gestational week. Initial limb outgrowth in amniotes is maintained by two signaling centers, the apical ectodermal ridge (AER) and the zone of polarizing activity...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 1975
M S Steinberg D R Garrod

Two problems are raised concerning the movement of cells during tissue-specific sorting-out of chick embryo cells in mixed aggregates. (i) A possible expectation from the hypothesis of 'contact inhibition' is that cells which are entirely surrounded by other cells in monolayer should be held stationary. Cells within solid aggregates, being totally surrounded by others, might also not be expecte...

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