41
41
texts
eye 41
favorite 1
comment 0
xxiii, 695 pages : 27 cm
Topics: Developmental biology, Developmental Biology, Science
8
8.0
texts
eye 8
favorite 0
comment 0
1 online resource (xii, 244 pages) :
Topics: Developmental biology, SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Developmental Biology, Developmental Biology
7
7.0
Jan 16, 2021
01/21
by
Perols, Sylvaine
texts
eye 7
favorite 0
comment 0
24 pages : 18 cm
Topics: Developmental biology -- Juvenile literature, Developmental biology
4
4.0
texts
eye 4
favorite 0
comment 0
xxviii, 333 p. : 25 cm
Topics: Developmental biology -- Laboratory manuals, Developmental Biology
181
181
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Isabelle Busseau; Stephanie Pierson; Dany Severac; Christelle Dantec; Martine Simonelig
texts
eye 181
favorite 0
comment 0
Drosophila Orb, the homologue of vertebrate CPEB is a key translational regulator involved in oocyte polarity and maturation through poly(A) tail elongation of specific mRNAs. orb has also an essential function during early oogenesis which has not been addressed at the molecular level. Here, we show that orb prevents cell death during early stages of oogenesis, thus allowing oogenesis to progress. It does so through the repression of autophagy, by directly repressing, together with the CCR4...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/08/15/007971
246
246
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Jonathan Rodenfels; Oksana Lavrynenko; Sophie Ayciriex; Julio L Sampaio; Andrej Shevchenko; Suzanne Eaton
texts
eye 246
favorite 0
comment 0
In Drosophila larvae, growth and developmental timing are regulated by nutrition in a tightly coordinated fashion. The networks that couple these processes are far from understood. Here, we show that the intestine responds to nutrient availability by regulating production of a circulating lipoprotein-associated form of the signaling protein Hedgehog (Hh). Levels of circulating Hh tune the rates of growth and developmental timing in a coordinated fashion. Circulating Hh signals to the fat body...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/07/29/002626
75
75
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Emiliana Tognon; Nadine Wollscheid; Katia Cortese; Carlo Tacchetti; thomas vaccari
texts
eye 75
favorite 0
comment 0
Multivesicular endosome (MVE) sorting depends on proteins of the Endosomal Sorting Complex Required for Transport (ESCRT) family. These are organized in four complexes (ESCRT-0, -I, -II, -III) that act in a sequential fashion to deliver ubiquitylated cargoes into the internal luminal vesicles (ILVs) of the MVE. Drosophila genes encoding ESCRT-I, -II, -III components function in sorting signaling receptors, including Notch and the JAK/STAT signaling receptor Domeless. Loss of ESCRT-I, -II, -III...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/02/18/002790
25
25
texts
eye 25
favorite 0
comment 0
v. : 26 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
3
3.0
texts
eye 3
favorite 0
comment 0
245 pages : 24 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
87
87
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
David C Plachetzki; M. Sabrina Pankey; Brian R Johnson; Eric J Ronne; Artyom Kopp; Richard K Grosberg
texts
eye 87
favorite 0
comment 0
Advances in sequencing technology have forced a quantitative revolution in Evolutionary Biology. One important feature of this renaissance is that comprehensive genomic resources can be obtained quickly for almost any taxon, thus speeding the development of new model organisms. Here we analyze 20 RNA-seq libraries from morphologically, sexually, and genetically distinct polyp types from the gonochoristic colonial hydrozoan,Hydractinia symbiolongicarpus (Cnidaria). Analyses of these data using...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/06/07/006072
241
241
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Itay Maza; Inbal Casoi; Sergey Viukov; Yoach Rais; Asaf Zviran; Shay Geula; Vladislav Krupalnik; Mirie Zerbib; Rada Massarwa; Noa Novershtern; Jacob Hanna
texts
eye 241
favorite 0
comment 0
Recent reports have proposed a new paradigm for obtaining mature somatic cell types from fibroblasts without going through a pluripotent state, by briefly expressing canonical iPSC reprogramming factors Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc (abbreviated as OSKM) in cells expanded in lineage differentiation promoting conditions. Here we apply genetic lineage tracing for endogenous Nanog locus and X chromosome reactivation during OSKM induced trans-differentiation, as these molecular events mark final stages...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/08/23/008284
237
237
Sep 21, 2011
09/11
by
Browder, Leon W
texts
eye 237
favorite 4
comment 2
Includes bibliographies and index
favoritefavoritefavoritefavorite ( 2 reviews )
Topic: Developmental biology
This material has been provided by The Royal College of Surgeons of England. The original may be consulted at The Royal College of Surgeons of England
Topic: Developmental Biology
472
472
Sep 15, 2011
09/11
by
Wilt, Fred H; Hake, Sarah
texts
eye 472
favorite 5
comment 0
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Topic: Developmental biology
Source: removedNEL
10
10.0
Jul 16, 2020
07/20
by
Slack, J. M. W. (Jonathan Michael Wyndham), 1949-
texts
eye 10
favorite 0
comment 0
vi, 321 p. : 25 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
5
5.0
texts
eye 5
favorite 0
comment 0
1 online resource
Topic: Developmental biology
151
151
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Steven Gregory Kuntz; Michael B Eisen
texts
eye 151
favorite 0
comment 0
Temperature affects both the timing and outcome of animal development, but the detailed effects of temperature on the progress of early development have been poorly characterized. To determine the impact of temperature on the order and timing of events during Drosophila melanogaster embryogenesis, we used time-lapse imaging to track the progress of embryos from shortly after egg laying through hatching at seven precisely maintained temperatures between 17.5°C and 32.5°C. We employed a...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2013/11/11/000307
404
404
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Xu Zhang; Wouter Koolhaas; Frank Schnorrer
texts
eye 404
favorite 0
comment 0
The development of CRISPR/Cas9 technologies promises a quantum leap in genome-engineering of model organisms. However, CRISPR-mediated gene targeting reports in Drosophila are still restricted to a few genes, use variable experimental conditions and vary in efficiency, questioning the universal applicability of the method. Here, we developed an efficient, two-step strategy to flexibly engineer the fly genome by combining CRISPR with recombinase-mediated cassette exchange (RMCE). In the first...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/08/11/007864
27
27
Oct 6, 2020
10/20
by
Slack, J. M. W. (Jonathan Michael Wyndham), 1949-
texts
eye 27
favorite 2
comment 0
vi, 321 p. : 25 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
Royal College of Surgeons of England
156
156
May 26, 2015
05/15
by
Merkel, Friedrich Siegmund, (1845-1919); Riedel, Bernhard Moritz Carl Ludwig, 1846-1916; Royal College of Surgeons of England
texts
eye 156
favorite 0
comment 0
Contents: 1. Die trophische Wurzel des Trigeminus / Fr. Merkel - 2. Erstes Entwickelungsstadium der Spermatozoiden / Fr. Merkel - 3. Entwickelung der Säugethierniere / B. Riedel - 4. Das postembryonale Wachsthum der Weichtheile / B. Riedel - 5. Technische Notiz / Fr. Merkel
Topic: Developmental Biology
89
89
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Xiao-Yong Li; Melissa Harrison; Tommy Kaplan; Michael Eisen
texts
eye 89
favorite 0
comment 0
A conspicuous feature of early animal development is the lack of transcription from the embryonic genome, and it typically takes several hours to several days (depending on the species) until widespread transcription of the embryonic genome begins. Although this transition is ubiquitous, relatively little is known about how the shift from a transcriptionally quiescent to transcriptionally active genome is controlled. We describe here the genome-wide distributions and temporal dynamics of...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/06/13/006312
16
16
texts
eye 16
favorite 0
comment 0
241 p. : 29 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
3
3.0
Apr 29, 2020
04/20
by
Belousov, L. V. (Lev Vladimirovich), 1935-
texts
eye 3
favorite 0
comment 0
238 p. : 25 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
97
97
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Helena Khaliullina; Mesut Bilgin; Julio L. Sampaio; Andrej Shevchenko; Suzanne Eaton
texts
eye 97
favorite 0
comment 0
Hedgehog proteins are lipid-modified secreted signaling molecules that regulate tissue development and homeostasis. Lipids contained in circulating lipoproteins repress the Hedgehog signaling pathway in the absence of Hedgehog ligand, but the identity of these lipids is unknown. Here, using biochemical fractionation and lipid mass spectrometry, we identify these inhibitory lipids as endocannabinoids. Endocannabinoids are present in lipoproteins of both flies and humans, and repress the pathway...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2013/11/18/000570
4
4.0
Jan 22, 2021
01/21
by
Ham, Richard G., 1932-
texts
eye 4
favorite 0
comment 0
xii, 843 p. : 25 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
4
4.0
texts
eye 4
favorite 0
comment 0
1 online resource (xxi, 370 pages) :
Topics: Developmental biology, SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Developmental Biology
113
113
Nov 20, 2019
11/19
by
Muller, Werner A., 1937-
texts
eye 113
favorite 1
comment 0
ix, 382 pages : 25 cm
Topics: Developmental Biology, Developmental biology, Ontwikkelingsbiologie, biologi, embryologi
2
2.0
May 31, 2022
05/22
by
Gerald P. Schatten
texts
eye 2
favorite 0
comment 0
1 online resource
Topics: Developmental biology, Developmental Biology, Biologie du développement
3
3.0
texts
eye 3
favorite 0
comment 0
1 online resource (xiii, 369 pages) :
Topics: Developmental biology, Developmental Biology, Biologie du développement, SCIENCE -- Life Sciences...
91
91
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Peter Baillie-Johnson; Susanne C van den Brink; Tina Balayo; David A Turner; Alfonso Martinez Arias
texts
eye 91
favorite 0
comment 0
Dissociated mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells were cultured to form aggregates in small volumes of basal medium in U-bottomed, non tissue-culture-treated 96-well plates and subsequently maintained in suspension culture. After growth for 48 hours, the aggregates are competent to respond to ubiquitous experimental signals which result in their symmetry-breaking and generation of defined polarised structures by 96 hours. It is envisaged that this system can be applied both to the study of early...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/05/19/005215
Royal College of Surgeons of England
185
185
Aug 18, 2015
08/15
by
Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich Philipp August, 1834-1919; Royal College of Surgeons of England
texts
eye 185
favorite 0
comment 0
The Royal College of Surgeons of England
Topic: Developmental Biology
103
103
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Andrew E Jaffe; Yuan Gao; Ran Tao; Thomas M Hyde; Daniel R Weinberger; Joel E Kleinman
texts
eye 103
favorite 0
comment 0
DNA methylation (DNAm) plays an important role in epigenetic regulation of gene expression, orchestrating tissue differentiation and development during all stages of mammalian life. This epigenetic control is especially important in the human brain, with extremely dynamic gene expression during fetal and infant life, and becomes progressively more stable at later periods of development . We characterized the epigenetic state of the developing and aging human frontal cortex in post-mortem tissue...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/05/27/005504
156
156
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Stefan Siebert; Freya E. Goetz; Samuel H. Church; Pathikrit Bhattacharyya; Felipe Zapata; Steven H.D. Haddock; Casey W. Dunn
texts
eye 156
favorite 0
comment 0
Siphonophores (Hydrozoa) have unparalleled colony-level complexity, precision of organization, and functional specialization between zooids (i.e., the units that make up colonies). Previous work has shown that, unlike other colonial animals, most growth in siphonophores is restricted to one or two well-defined growth zones that are the sites of both elongation and zooid budding. To understand this unique growth at the cellular level, we characterize the distribution of interstitial stem cells...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/01/06/001685
128
128
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Nariman Battulin; Veniamin S Fishman; Alexander M Mazur; Mikhail Pomaznoy; Anna A Khabarova; Dmitry A Afonnikov; Egor B Prokhortchouk; Oleg L Serov
texts
eye 128
favorite 0
comment 0
The 3D organization of the genome is tightly connected to its biological function. The Hi-C approach was recently introduced as a method that can be used to identify higher-order chromatin interactions genome-wide. The aim of this study was to determine genome-wide chromatin interaction frequencies using the Hi-C approach in mouse sperm cells and embryonic fibroblasts. The obtained results demonstrated that the 3D genome organizations of sperm and fibroblast cells show a high degree of...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/06/16/006247
2
2.0
Jul 11, 2020
07/20
by
Open University. Arts Foundation Course Team
texts
eye 2
favorite 0
comment 0
volumes : 30 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
6
6.0
texts
eye 6
favorite 0
comment 0
xii, 393 p. : 24 cm
Topic: Developmental biology
113
113
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Shreelatha Bhat; Minjung Shin; Suhyoung Bahk; Young-Joon Kim; Walton D. Jones
texts
eye 113
favorite 0
comment 0
Large scale genetic screening is tedious and time-consuming. To address this problem, we propose a novel two-tiered screening system comprising an initial "pooling" screen that identifies miRNAs whose tissue-specific over-expression causes a phenotype of interest followed by a more focused secondary screen that uses gene-specific RNAi. As miRNAs inhibit translation or direct the destruction of their target mRNAs, any phenotype observed with miRNA over-expression can be attributed to...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/01/22/001982
158
158
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Helena Jambor; Vineeth Surendranath; Alex T. Kalinka; Pavel Mejstrik; Stephan Saalfeld; Pavel Tomancak
texts
eye 158
favorite 0
comment 0
The asymmetric distribution of cytoplasmic components by mRNA localization is critical for eukaryotic cells and affects large numbers of transcripts. How such global subcellular localization of mRNAs is regulated is still unknown. We combined transcriptomics and systematic imaging to determine tissue-specific expression and subcellular localizations of 5862 mRNAs during Drosophila oogenesis. While the transcriptome is stable and alternative splicing and polyadenylation is rare, cytoplasmic...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/09/09/008938
112
112
Sep 18, 2014
09/14
by
Christina Zakas; Matthew V Rockman
texts
eye 112
favorite 0
comment 0
The marine polychaete Streblospio benedicti exhibits two distinct larval types, making it a model for the study of developmental evolution. Females produce either large eggs or small ones, which develop into distinct lecithotrophic or planktotrophic larvae with concomitant morphological and life-history differences. Here, we investigate the inheritance of key morphological traits that distinguish the larval types. We use genetic crosses to establish the influence of maternal and zygotic...
Topic: Developmental Biology
Source: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/09/02/008730
2
2.0
texts
eye 2
favorite 0
comment 0
pages
Topics: Cytology -- Periodicals, Developmental biology -- Periodicals, Cytology, Developmental biology
12
12
texts
eye 12
favorite 1
comment 0
1 online resource (xviii, 426 pages) :
Topics: Developmental biology, Evolution, SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Developmental Biology
4
4.0
texts
eye 4
favorite 0
comment 0
1 online resource (xii, 257 pages, 10 unnumbered pages of plates) :
Topics: Developmental biology, Evolution (Biology), Biological Evolution, Developmental Biology
2
2.0
texts
eye 2
favorite 0
comment 0
Topics: Cytology -- Periodicals, Developmental biology -- Periodicals, Cytology, Developmental biology
8
8.0
texts
eye 8
favorite 0
comment 0
134 p. : 25 cm
Topics: Reproduction, Developmental biology
4
4.0
Mar 26, 2021
03/21
by
Moore, John Alexander, 1915- comp
texts
eye 4
favorite 0
comment 0
xi, 329 p. 23 cm
Topics: Genetics, Developmental biology
5
5.0
texts
eye 5
favorite 1
comment 0
xi, 787 pages : 24 cm
Topics: Cytology, Developmental biology
3
3.0
texts
eye 3
favorite 0
comment 0
xi, 784 pages : 24 cm
Topics: Cytology, Developmental biology
former call number: Arey
Topics: Embryology, Developmental Biology
7
7.0
Oct 30, 2018
10/18
by
Pluckrose, Henry
texts
eye 7
favorite 1
comment 0
26 pages : 23 cm
Topics: Growth, Developmental biology
2
2.0
texts
eye 2
favorite 0
comment 0
xi, 784 pages : 24 cm
Topics: Cytology, Developmental biology