Search results for "Morphogen"

showing 10 items of 258 documents

Bioengineered human bone tissue using autogenous osteoblasts cultured on different biomatrices

2003

Surgical treatment of critical-size posttraumatic bone defects is still a challenging problem, even in modern bone and joint surgery. Progress in cellular and molecular biology during the last decade now permits novel approaches in bone engineering. Recent conceptual and technical advances have enabled the use of mitotically expanded, bone-derived cells as a therapeutic approach for tissue repair. Using three different tissue carrier systems, we successfully cultivated human osteoblasts in a newly developed perfusion chamber. We studied cell proliferation and the expression of osteocalcin, osteopontin, bone morphogenetic protein-2A, alkaline phosphatase, and vascular endothelial growth fact…

Materials sciencemedicine.medical_treatmentBiomedical EngineeringEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayBone healingBone graftingBiomaterialsTissue engineeringBone cellmedicineAnimalsHumansOsteopontinOsteoblastsTissue EngineeringbiologyOsteoblastExtracellular MatrixCell biologyBone morphogenetic protein 7Durapatitemedicine.anatomical_structureBone Morphogenetic ProteinsBone Substitutesbiology.proteinOsteocalcinBiomedical engineeringJournal of Biomedical Materials Research
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Villification: How the Gut Gets Its Villi

2013

Intestinal Villus Formation The intestinal villi are essential elaborations of the lining of the gut that increase the epithelial surface area for nutrient absorption. Shyer et al. (p. 212 , published online 29 August; see the Perspective by Simons ) show that in both the developing human and chick gut, the villi are formed in a step-wise progression, involving the sequential folding of the endoderm into longitudinal ridges, via a zigzag pattern, to finally form individual villi. These changes are established through the differentiation of the smooth muscle layers of the gut, restricting the expansion of the adjacent proliferating and growing endoderm and mesenchyme, generating compressive …

MesenchymeXenopusLongitudinal ridgesMorphogenesisChick EmbryoBiologyModels Biologicaldigestive systemArticleMesodermMiceSmooth musclemedicineMorphogenesisAnimalsHumansMultidisciplinaryta114ExtramuralEndodermdigestive oral and skin physiologyMuscle SmoothAnatomyEpitheliumCell biologyGastrointestinal Tractmedicine.anatomical_structureNutrient absorptionEndoderm
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In-vitro regulation of odontogenic gene expression in human embryonic tooth cells and SHED cells

2012

The bud-to-cap stage transition during early tooth development is a time when the tooth-inducing potential becomes restricted to the mesenchyme. Several key genes, expressed in the mesenchyme at this stage, are an absolute requirement for the progression of tooth development. These include the transcription factors Msx1 and Pax9. The inductive potential of tooth mesenchyme cells is a key requisite for whole-tooth bioengineering and thus identification of cells that can retain this property following expansion in culture is an important as yet unresolved, goal. We show here that in-vitro culture of embryonic human tooth mesenchyme cells and SHED cells express low levels of PAX9 and MSX1 and …

MesodermCell signalingHistologyMesenchymeSHEDPAX9MSX1tissue engineering cell signallingBone Morphogenetic Protein 4BiologyCell LinePathology and Forensic MedicineMesodermstomatognathic systemmedicineHumansChildMSX1 Transcription FactorRegulation of gene expressionMesenchymal stem cellGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell BiologyEmbryonic stem cellCell biologystomatognathic diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureBone morphogenetic protein 4Cell cultureImmunologyOdontogenesisPAX9 Transcription FactorToothSignal TransductionCell and Tissue Research
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Manganese interferes with calcium, perturbs ERK signaling, and produces embryos with no skeleton.

2011

Manganese (Mn) has been associated with embryo toxicity as it impairs differentiation of neural and skeletogenic cells in vertebrates. Nevertheless, information on the mechanisms operating at the cellular level remains scant. We took advantage of an amenable embryonic model to investigate the effects of Mn in biomineral formation. Sea urchin (Paracentrotus lividus) embryos were exposed to Mn from fertilization, harvested at different developmental stages, and analyzed for their content in calcium (Ca), expression of skeletogenic genes, localization of germ layer markers, and activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). By optical and immunofluorescence microscopy, we found…

Mesodermanimal structuresEmbryo NonmammalianMAP Kinase Signaling SystemMorphogenesisEctodermGerm layerToxicologyBone and BonesEmbryo Culture Techniquesbiology.animalBotanyToxicity TestsmedicineAnimalsRNA MessengerSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E CitologiaPhosphorylationSea urchinIn Situ HybridizationbiologyGene Expression ProfilingAbnormalities Drug-InducedGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalEmbryoFluoresceinsEmbryonic stem cellCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureTeratogensManganese CompoundsSea Urchinsembryonic structuresManganese calcium Skeleton ERK Paracentrotus lividus embryosCalciumEndodermToxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology
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Expression of en and wg in the embryonic head and brain of Drosophila indicates a refolded band of seven segment remnants

1992

ABSTRACT Based on the expression pattern of the segment polarity genes engrailed and wingless during the embryonic development of the larval head, we found evidence that the head of Drosophila consists of remnants of seven segments (4 pregnathal and 3 gnathal) all of which contribute cells to neuromeres in the central nervous system. Until completion of germ band retraction, the four pregnathal segment remnants and their corresponding neuromeres become arranged in an S-shape. We discuss published evidence for seven head segments and morphogenetic movements during head formation in various insects (and crustaceans).

Metamerism (biology)biologyfungiEmbryogenesisGene ExpressionGenes InsectEmbryoAnatomyNeuromerebiology.organism_classificationengrailedSegment polarity geneCrustaceaDrosophilidaeHead segmentationMorphogenesisAnimalsDrosophilaHeadMolecular BiologyDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment
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Functional and structural insights into astacin metallopeptidases

2012

The astacins are a family of multi-domain metallopeptidases with manifold functions in metabolism. They are either secreted or membrane-anchored and are regulated by being synthesized as inactive zymogens and also by colocalizing protein inhibitors. The distinct family members consist of N-terminal signal peptides and pro-segments, zincdependent catalytic domains, further downstream extracellular domains, transmembrane anchors, and cytosolic domains. The catalytic domains of four astacins and the zymogen of one of these have been structurally characterized and shown to comprise compact ~200-residue zinc-dependent moieties divided into an N-terminal and a C-terminal sub-domain by an active-s…

MetzincinSignal peptideStereochemistryMolecular Sequence DataClinical BiochemistryTolloidMatrix metalloproteinaseBiologyBiochemistryEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesEnzyme activatorBone morphogenetic proteinsZymogenAnimalsHumansProtease InhibitorsAmino Acid SequenceTyrosineMolecular BiologyPeptide sequence030304 developmental biologyEnzyme Precursors0303 health sciences030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyMetalloendopeptidasesMeprinTransmembrane protein3. Good healthEnzyme ActivationBiochemistryAstacinCatalytic domainsbchm
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Gyrification from constrained cortical expansion

2014

The exterior of the mammalian brain - the cerebral cortex - has a conserved layered structure whose thickness varies little across species. However, selection pressures over evolutionary time scales have led to cortices that have a large surface area to volume ratio in some organisms, with the result that the brain is strongly convoluted into sulci and gyri. Here we show that the gyrification can arise as a nonlinear consequence of a simple mechanical instability driven by tangential expansion of the gray matter constrained by the white matter. A physical mimic of the process using a layered swelling gel captures the essence of the mechanism, and numerical simulations of the brain treated a…

Models AnatomicCompressive StrengthModels NeurologicalLissencephalyFOS: Physical sciencesGeometryPattern Formation and Solitons (nlin.PS)Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterNerve Fibers MyelinatedWhite matterNeural PathwaysPolymicrogyriamedicineHumansDimethylpolysiloxanesPhysics - Biological PhysicsTissues and Organs (q-bio.TO)GyrificationCell ProliferationPhysicsCerebral CortexNeuronsMultidisciplinaryta114PachygyriaQuantitative Biology - Tissues and OrgansAnatomymedicine.diseaseNonlinear Sciences - Pattern Formation and SolitonsElasticitymedicine.anatomical_structureCerebral cortexBiological Physics (physics.bio-ph)FOS: Biological sciencesBrain sizePhysical SciencesSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Stress MechanicalBrain morphogenesisGels
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Segment polarity and DV patterning gene expression reveals segmental organization of theDrosophilabrain

2003

The insect brain is traditionally subdivided into the trito-, deuto- and protocerebrum. However, both the neuromeric status and the course of the borders between these regions are unclear. The Drosophila embryonic brain develops from the procephalic neurogenic region of the ectoderm, which gives rise to a bilaterally symmetrical array of about 100 neuronal precursor cells, called neuroblasts. Based on a detailed description of the spatiotemporal development of the entire population of embryonic brain neuroblasts, we carried out a comprehensive analysis of the expression of segment polarity genes (engrailed, wingless, hedgehog, gooseberry distal,mirror) and DV patterning genes (muscle segmen…

Models Anatomicanimal structuresBiologyNeuroblastGenes ReporterEctodermMorphogenesisAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsCompartment (development)Molecular BiologyIn Situ HybridizationBody PatterningNeuroectodermfungiGenes HomeoboxBrainGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalAnatomyNeuromereengrailedDrosophila melanogasterSegment polarity geneembryonic structuresHomeoboxNeuroscienceGanglion mother cellDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment
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Sizzled Is Unique among Secreted Frizzled-related Proteins for Its Ability to Specifically Inhibit Bone Morphogenetic Protein-1 (BMP-1)/Tolloid-like …

2012

BMP-1/tolloid-like proteinases (BTPs) are major enzymes involved in extracellular matrix assembly and activation of bioactive molecules, both growth factors and anti-angiogenic molecules. Although the control of BTP activity by several enhancing molecules is well established, the possibility that regulation also occurs through endogenous inhibitors is still debated. Secreted frizzled-related proteins (sFRPs) have been studied as possible candidates, with highly contradictory results, after the demonstration that sizzled, a sFRP found in Xenopus and zebrafish, was a potent inhibitor of Xenopus and zebrafish tolloid-like proteases. In this study, we demonstrate that mammalian sFRP-1, -2, and …

Models MolecularProteasesFrizzledanimal structuresMolecular Sequence DataXenopusXenopus ProteinsBiochemistryBone morphogenetic protein 1Bone Morphogenetic Protein 1MiceXenopus laevismedicineAnimalsHumansProtease InhibitorsAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyZebrafishGlycoproteinsSequence Homology Amino AcidbiologyExtracellular matrix assemblyfungiIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsTissue Inhibitor of MetalloproteinasesCell BiologySurface Plasmon Resonancebiology.organism_classificationMatrix MetalloproteinasesRecombinant ProteinsExtracellular MatrixWnt ProteinsBiochemistryMechanism of actionembryonic structuresEnzymologySignal transductionmedicine.symptomPeptide HydrolasesSignal TransductionJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Meprins, membrane-bound and secreted astacin metalloproteinases

2008

The astacins are a subfamily of the metzincin superfamily of metalloproteinases. The first to be characterized was the crayfish enzyme astacin. To date more than 200 members of this family have been identified in species ranging from bacteria to humans. Astacins are involved in developmental morphogenesis, matrix assembly, tissue differentiation and digestion. Family members include the procollagen C-proteinase (BMP1, bone morphogenetic protein 1), tolloid and mammalian tolloid-like, HMP (Hydra vulgaris metalloproteinase), sea urchin BP10 (blastula protein) and SPAN (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus astacin), the 'hatching' subfamily comprising alveolin, ovastacin, LCE, HCE ('low' and 'high' c…

Models MolecularSubfamilyanimal structuresProtein ConformationClinical BiochemistryMolecular Sequence DataMatrix metalloproteinaseBiochemistryBone morphogenetic protein 1ArticleSubstrate SpecificityExtracellular matrixIntestinal mucosaAnimalsHumansTissue DistributionAmino Acid SequenceIntestinal MucosaMolecular BiologyPhylogenybiologyMetalloendopeptidasesGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationStrongylocentrotus purpuratusMolecular biologyCell biologyProtein Subunitsembryonic structuresMolecular MedicineMATH domainAstacin
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