Search results for "neural genes"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

A Mutually Stimulating Loop Involving Emx2 and Canonical Wnt Signalling Specifically Promotes Expansion of Occipital Cortex and Hippocampus

2005

The correct size of the different areas composing the mature cerebral cortex depends on the proper early allocation of cortical progenitors to their distinctive areal fates, as well as on appropriate subsequent tuning of their area-specific proliferation--differentiation profiles. Whereas much is known about the genetics of the former process, the molecular mechanisms regulating proliferation and differentiation rates within distinctive cortical proto-areas are still largely obscure. Here we show that a mutual stimulating loop, involving Emx2 and canonical Wnt signalling, specifically promotes expansion of the occipito-hippocampal anlage. Collapse of this loop occurring in Emx2 2/2 mutants …

Cognitive NeuroscienceEMX2HippocampusSettore BIO/11 - Biologia MolecolareProneural genescell cycle genesBiologyHippocampusMiceCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceCortex (anatomy)medicineAnimalsWnt signallingHomeodomain ProteinsNeuronsproneural genesStem CellsGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalCell DifferentiationCell cycleareal sizingCell Cycle GeneMice Mutant StrainsWnt Proteinsmedicine.anatomical_structureCerebral cortexEmx2Occipital LobeOccipital lobeareal sizing; Emx2; Wnt signalling; cell cycle genes; proneural genesNeuroscienceCell DivisionSignal TransductionTranscription FactorsCerebral Cortex
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Neuroblast formation and patterning during early brain development in Drosophila.

2004

The Drosophila embryo provides a useful model system to study the mechanisms that lead to pattern and cell diversity in the central nervous system (CNS). The Drosophila CNS, which encompasses the brain and the ventral nerve cord, develops from a bilaterally symmetrical neuroectoderm, which gives rise to neural stem cells, called neuroblasts. The structure of the embryonic ventral nerve cord is relatively simple, consisting of a sequence of repeated segmental units (neuromeres), and the mechanisms controlling the formation and specification of the neuroblasts that form these neuromeres are quite well understood. Owing to the much higher complexity and hidden segmental organization of the bra…

Neuronsanimal structuresNeuroectodermfungiCentral nervous systemBrainProneural genesCell DifferentiationAnatomyBiologyNeuromereGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyNeural stem cellmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuroblastVentral nerve cordVertebratesmedicineAnimalsDrosophilaGanglion mother cellNeuroscienceBody PatterningBioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology
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The pattern of neuroblast formation, mitotic domains and proneural gene expression during early brain development in Drosophila.

2003

In the Drosophila embryo, studies on CNS development have so far mainly focused on the relatively simply structured ventral nerve cord. In the trunk, proneural genes become expressed in small cell clusters at specific positions of the ventral neuroectoderm. A lateral inhibition process mediated by the neurogenic genes ensures that only one cell within each proneural cluster delaminates as a neural stem cell (neuroblast). Thus, a fixed number of neuroblasts is formed, according to a stereotypical spatiotemporal and segmentally repeated pattern, each subsequently generating a specific cell lineage. Owing to higher complexity and hidden segmental organisation, the mechanisms underlying the dev…

animal structuresMitosisProneural genesBiologyNeuroblastLateral inhibitionEctodermMorphogenesisAnimalsCell LineageNeurons AfferentMolecular BiologyIn Situ HybridizationGeneticsNeuronsNeuroectodermGenes HomeoboxBrainGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalNeural stem cellDrosophila melanogasterVentral nerve cordembryonic structuresScuteNeuroscienceGanglion mother cellNeurogliaBiomarkersDevelopmental BiologyDevelopment (Cambridge, England)
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I geni neurali di tubulina nello sviluppo di P. lividus

2010

tubulinneural genesSettore BIO/11 - Biologia Molecolaresea urchin
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