Literature DB >> 12798297

beta-Catenin signals regulate cell growth and the balance between progenitor cell expansion and differentiation in the nervous system.

Dietmar Zechner1, Yasuyuki Fujita, Jörg Hülsken, Thomas Müller, Ingrid Walther, Makoto M Taketo, E Bryan Crenshaw, Walter Birchmeier, Carmen Birchmeier.   

Abstract

beta-Catenin is an essential component of the canonical Wnt signaling system that controls decisive steps in development. We employed here two conditional beta-catenin mutant alleles to alter beta-catenin signaling in the central nervous system of mice: one allele to ablate beta-catenin and the second allele to express a constitutively active beta-catenin. The tissue mass of the spinal cord and brain is reduced after ablation of beta-catenin, and the neuronal precursor population is not maintained. In contrast, the spinal cord and brain of mice that express activated beta-catenin is much enlarged in mass, and the neuronal precursor population is increased in size. beta-Catenin signals are thus essential for the maintenance of proliferation of neuronal progenitors, controlling the size of the progenitor pool, and impinging on the decision of neuronal progenitors to proliferate or to differentiate.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12798297     DOI: 10.1016/s0012-1606(03)00123-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Biol        ISSN: 0012-1606            Impact factor:   3.582


  185 in total

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10.  Intrastriatal transforming growth factor alpha delivery to a model of Parkinson's disease induces proliferation and migration of endogenous adult neural progenitor cells without differentiation into dopaminergic neurons.

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