Literature DB >> 15601817

Incredible journey: how do developmental signals travel through tissue?

Alan Jian Zhu1, Matthew P Scott.   

Abstract

How developmental signaling proteins traverse tissue during animal development, through or around tightly packed cells, remains an incompletely resolved mystery. Signaling protein movement is regulated to create gradients, control amounts, impose barriers, or provide direction. Signaling can be controlled by the rate of signal production, modification, active transport, trapping along the path, or by the properties of the receptor apparatus. Signals may move by diffusion outside cells, attached to migrating cells, attached to carrier molecules, through cells by transcytosis, along cell extensions, or in released membrane packets. Recent findings about the movement of Hedgehog, Wingless (Wnt), and TGF-beta signaling proteins have helped to clarify the molecular mechanisms used to ensure that developmental signals carry only good news.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15601817     DOI: 10.1101/gad.1233104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genes Dev        ISSN: 0890-9369            Impact factor:   11.361


  36 in total

1.  Scube/You activity mediates release of dually lipid-modified Hedgehog signal in soluble form.

Authors:  Adrian Creanga; Thomas D Glenn; Randall K Mann; Adam M Saunders; William S Talbot; Philip A Beachy
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2012-06-07       Impact factor: 11.361

2.  Morphogen gradient interpretation by a regulated trafficking step during ligand-receptor transduction.

Authors:  Jerome Jullien; John Gurdon
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2005-10-31       Impact factor: 11.361

3.  Epithelial trafficking of Sonic hedgehog by megalin.

Authors:  Carlos R Morales; Jibin Zeng; Mohamed El Alfy; Jeremy L Barth; Mastan Rao Chintalapudi; Robert A McCarthy; John P Incardona; W Scott Argraves
Journal:  J Histochem Cytochem       Date:  2006-06-26       Impact factor: 2.479

4.  Quantifying the Gurken morphogen gradient in Drosophila oogenesis.

Authors:  Lea A Goentoro; Gregory T Reeves; Craig P Kowal; Luigi Martinelli; Trudi Schüpbach; Stanislav Y Shvartsman
Journal:  Dev Cell       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 12.270

Review 5.  Understanding morphogen gradients: a problem of dispersion and containment.

Authors:  Thomas B Kornberg; Arjun Guha
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2007-07-23       Impact factor: 5.578

Review 6.  Understanding how morphogens work.

Authors:  J C Smith; A Hagemann; Y Saka; P H Williams
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2008-04-12       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 7.  Shaping morphogen gradients by proteoglycans.

Authors:  Dong Yan; Xinhua Lin
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 10.005

Review 8.  Itinerant exosomes: emerging roles in cell and tissue polarity.

Authors:  Aparna Lakkaraju; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan
Journal:  Trends Cell Biol       Date:  2008-04-07       Impact factor: 20.808

Review 9.  Looking at the origin of phenotypic variation from pattern formation gene networks.

Authors:  Isaac Salazar-Ciudad
Journal:  J Biosci       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 1.826

10.  BMP/SMAD1 signaling sets a threshold for the left/right pathway in lateral plate mesoderm and limits availability of SMAD4.

Authors:  Milena B Furtado; Mark J Solloway; Vanessa J Jones; Mauro W Costa; Christine Biben; Orit Wolstein; Jost I Preis; Duncan B Sparrow; Yumiko Saga; Sally L Dunwoodie; Elizabeth J Robertson; Patrick P L Tam; Richard P Harvey
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2008-11-01       Impact factor: 11.361

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.