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1 rface during a gastrulation process known as epiboly.
2 alations in the mesendoderm, irrespective of epiboly.
3 e, all of which likely contribute to delayed epiboly.
4 epithelium of the zebrafish gastrula during epiboly.
5 tine and cytidine-5-diphosphocholine) during epiboly.
6 ssion patterns and explains expansion during epiboly.
7 erative factors, including cyclin D1, at 70% epiboly.
8 during Wnt/PCP signalling without affecting epiboly.
9 of morphogenetic movements during zebrafish epiboly.
10 l and temporal movements of BCR cells during epiboly.
11 rrest of development at the beginning of the epiboly.
12 edge of the presumptive neuroectoderm by 70% epiboly.
13 re required for blastocoel roof thinning and epiboly.
14 te in involution as the blastoderm undergoes epiboly.
15 nover within EVL cells during the process of epiboly.
16 r progenitors in the zebrafish embryo at 40% epiboly, a stage prior to the initiation of gastrulation
18 re normally expressed in the germring by 50% epiboly and are induced in the primordium of rhombomere
22 has largely been interpreted to result from epiboly and convergent-extension movements that drive bo
25 fish B-ephrins are expressed as early as 30% epiboly and during gastrula stages: in the germ ring, sh
26 ed by the competition between extraembryonic epiboly and embryonic myosin-driven contraction-which pe
28 re-derived surface epithelium that undergoes epiboly and in the large vegetal blastomeres that gradua
29 e that Yes kinase plays an important role in epiboly and indicate that Yes kinase participates in sig
31 ession begins immediately after the onset of epiboly and is most active before appearance of the germ
35 e embryos are smaller and exhibit defects in epiboly and patterning of axial and prechordal mesoderm.
36 nalling was established as being between 60% epiboly and tailbud stages using the Fgf receptor inhibi
37 st detected in the animal hemispheres at mid-epiboly and then the vegetal hemispheres by the end of g
38 towards the vegetal pole in the movements of epiboly and towards the dorsal midline in convergent mov
39 omethylation within the target loci prior to epiboly, and ciglitazone altered TDCIPP-induced effects
40 nt predictions of cell rearrangements during epiboly, and here was used to predict successfully the l
41 morpholino oligonucleotide caused defects in epiboly, and led to reduced cell adhesion as shown by ce
42 1 kinases reduces a specific cell migration, epiboly, and results in the reduction of goosecoid expre
43 lization, then increase progressively during epiboly, and was maintained at high levels throughout ga
44 ebrate morphogenesis, we have focused on the epiboly arrest mutant half baked (hab), which segregates
45 ing a putative dominant negative Irf6 caused epiboly arrest, loss of gene expression characteristic o
47 al cells have been shown to rearrange during epiboly, as they spread to cover the large yolk cell.
49 ptosis in morphants were normal prior to 90% epiboly, but were elevated after 10 h post-fertilization
50 s, affect the major morphogenetic processes, epiboly, convergence and extension, and tail morphogenes
51 ential mechanisms involved in TDCIPP-induced epiboly defects and (2) determine whether coexposure to
52 hosphate flame retardant (OPFR) that induces epiboly defects during zebrafish embryogenesis, leading
54 lsr activity in zebrafish embryos results in epiboly defects that appear to be independent of the req
61 velopmental phenotypes, including a delay in epiboly, depleted S1P levels, elevated levels of sphingo
62 ailed to migrate toward the vegetal pole and epiboly did not occur, a phenotype similar but distinct
63 erienced by the rearranging EVL cells, post- epiboly embryos, whose EVL cells no longer rearrange, we
65 acquired regional identity as a group at 80% epiboly even before making vertical contact with axial m
66 the embryonic midline and the micromere cap, epiboly fails, and the HRO-NOS knockdown embryos die.
70 cs during morphogenetic processes that drive epiboly in early Danio rerio (zebrafish) development.
72 w that during extraembryonic tissue (serosa) epiboly in the insect Tribolium castaneum, the non-proli
73 impaired the early morphogenetic movement of epiboly in zebrafish embryos and caused microtubule defe
74 studies indicate that Galpha(12/13) regulate epiboly, in part by associating with the cytoplasmic ter
75 l positions of myocardial progenitors at 40% epiboly indicate that signals residing at the embryonic
76 a YSL-driven zygotic mechanism essential for epiboly initiation and reveals a Ca(2+) channel-independ
77 deficient zebrafish embryos, impaired in the epiboly, internalization, convergence and extension gast
78 directional movements of cells that include epiboly, involution, and convergence and extension (C&E)
80 l membrane turnover in the EVL cells of post-epiboly killifish embryos is accelerated at cell-cell co
81 hyperactivation and progress faster through epiboly, leading to tailbud-stage embryos that have a na
82 eting translation of foxH1 disrupt embryonic epiboly movements during gastrulation and cause death on
88 e that Fyn kinase plays an important role in epiboly, possibly through its effects in calcium signali
89 hrough oriented cell division and to promote epiboly, possibly through maintenance of tissue-surface
90 clude incomplete dorsal convergence, delayed epiboly progression and an early lysis phenotype during
91 this developmental solution utilized during epiboly resembles the mechanism of wound healing, we pro
95 ar markers reveal that the axial mesoderm of epiboly stage embryos is abnormally widened in beta4GalT
96 gradient is established between 30% and 40% epiboly stages and that it is preceded by graded mRNA ex
99 zebrafish beta4 protein blocks initiation of epiboly, the first morphogenetic movement of teleost emb
101 as "forerunner cells." Between 60%- and 80%-epiboly, the forerunner cells coalesce into a coherent c
102 long-range intercellular coordination during epiboly, the process in which the blastoderm spreads ove
105 ents of convergence and extension as well as epiboly through the G-protein-coupled PGE(2) receptor (E
106 in vivo evidence that Galpha(12/13) regulate epiboly through two distinct mechanisms: limiting E-cadh
107 o image the positions of all nuclei from mid-epiboly to early segmentation by digital sheet light mic
110 ased deep cell adhesion and fail to initiate epiboly, which can be rescued by re-expression of 2-OST
111 l-zygotic mutants of mondoa showed perturbed epiboly with low penetrance and compensatory changes in