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1  controlled by the duration of exposure to a morphogen.
2  restricted distribution of a lipid-modified morphogen.
3 ing out positional information in the Bicoid morphogen.
4 tral NSC identity became independent of this morphogen.
5  on Sonic hedgehog (SHH) as a main signaling morphogen.
6  appropriate differentiation and response to morphogens.
7 provides a feedback by actively transporting morphogens.
8 mall RNAs are reminiscent of those of animal morphogens.
9 ding cell fate determination are provided by morphogens.
10 ent by mediating the action of Hedgehog (Hh) morphogens.
11 f hESCs by altering the cellular response to morphogens.
12 sses and have become paradigms for classical morphogens.
13 r mCherry) could be converted into synthetic morphogens.
14 d through the action of spatial gradients of morphogens.
15 sed: one is position-dependent and relies on morphogen accumulation at future organ sites; the other
16                Hedgehog proteins are pivotal morphogens acting through a canonical pathway involving
17                       As a central model for morphogen action during animal development, the bone mor
18 y morphogen range and the hormonal gating of morphogen action.
19 because of the loss of two distinct modes of morphogen action: 1) maintenance of growth within the wi
20 , much of this diversity emerges through the morphogen actions of Sonic hedgehog (Shh).
21 se data, as well as published information on morphogen activity, we developed a chemomechanical growt
22 eta molecule and well-established long-range morphogen, acts over one cell diameter to maintain the G
23 ermines the final global distribution of the morphogen and enables reproducible patterning.
24 chemicals, and movement and is important for morphogen and growth factor signaling.
25  of experimental data suggests that chemical morphogen and mechanical processes are strongly coupled.
26  for the formation of patterns with a single morphogen and whose fundamental mode pattern robustly sc
27 enetically encoded program in which secreted morphogens and cell-cell interactions prompt the adoptio
28 oncentration leads to the more production of morphogens and increases the growth rate of cells.
29 otein, or YAP) acts downstream of patterning morphogens and other tissue-intrinsic signals to promote
30 distinguish mobile small RNAs from classical morphogens and present a unique direct mechanism through
31 arization and proliferation are regulated by morphogens and signaling pathways.
32 villus tip epithelium and signal through Bmp morphogens and the non-canonical Wnt5a ligand.
33                      Long-range signaling by morphogens and their inhibitors define embryonic pattern
34 P and by earlier reports on the spreading of morphogens and vesicles in multicellular organisms.
35 t concrete examples that rapidly readout the morphogen, and predictions for new experiments.
36                                 Secreted Wnt morphogens are essential for embryogenesis and homeostas
37              Some receptors that sense these morphogens are known to localize to only the apical or b
38                       One mechanism by which morphogens are proposed to traverse extracellular space
39 pment, diffusible signaling molecules called morphogens are thought to determine cell fates in a conc
40 nt5a, a member of the Wnt family of secreted morphogens, as an essential factor in maintaining dendri
41                          Typical analysis of morphogens assumes that spatial information is decoded i
42 stems, we were unable to correlate the plant morphogen auxin with bud positioning in Sargassum, nor c
43                                Our data link morphogen-based patterning to mechanically controlled sm
44             Here, we investigate the role of morphogenes bolA and mreB during CCA using gene expressi
45 r standard culture conditions BMP4 acts as a morphogen but this requires secondary signals and partic
46 ression domains across fields of cells (e.g. morphogens), but how these domains are refined remains u
47 tion by the developing cell of an inhibitory morphogen, but how this cell becomes immune to self-inhi
48 and/or orthogonal gradients of developmental morphogens can be maintained, resulting in neural tube p
49        Thus, spatial information provided by morphogens can be transitioned to epigenetic mechanisms
50 s, the reaction and diffusion of biochemical morphogens, can create these patterns.
51 could be altered by adding feedback loops or morphogen cascades to receiver cell response circuits.
52  proteoglycans interact with growth factors, morphogens, chemokines, and extracellular matrix (ECM) p
53 hat vertebrate Pax6 interacts with a pair of morphogen-coding genes, Tgfb2 and Fst, to form a putativ
54  models where readout is provided not by the morphogen concentration but by its spatial and temporal
55 t of spatial and temporal derivatives of the morphogen concentration can play important roles in defi
56                                              Morphogen concentration gradients that extend across dev
57    Positional information derived from local morphogen concentration plays an important role in patte
58 erive fundamental limits to the precision of morphogen concentration sensing for two canonical mechan
59 n steady state by measuring the value of the morphogen concentration.
60 ven smaller errors than directly reading the morphogen concentration.
61 nition, gene expression must be sensitive to morphogen concentration.
62  combinations of extracellular cues, such as morphogen concentrations.
63 body content of thyroid hormone (the primary morphogen controlling metamorphosis) and corticosterone
64 etic parameters, like diffusion and decay of morphogens, could play a role in formation of aperture p
65 a wing-a classic paradigm-is governed by two morphogens, Decapentaplegic (Dpp, a BMP) and Wingless (W
66 ducing and -receiving cells to enable direct morphogen delivery.
67                        A key question is how morphogen diffusion and gene expression regulation shape
68 t signaling could be due to local changes in morphogen diffusion, representing a novel mechanism in t
69 ctivates the synthesis of its own inhibitory morphogens, diffusion of which establishes the different
70                  The Hedgehog (Hh) family of morphogens direct cell fate decisions during embryogenes
71  human haematopoietic stem cells, we perform morphogen-directed differentiation of human pluripotent
72 between adhesion-based self-organization and morphogen-directed patterning.
73 lized signalling filopodia, or cytonemes, in morphogen dispersion and signalling.
74                       Recent measurements of morphogen distribution have allowed us to subject this h
75                     Buffering variability in morphogen distribution is essential for reproducible pat
76 early Drosophila embryo, measurements of the morphogen Dorsal, which is a transcription factor respon
77 on are paradoxically robust to variations in morphogen dosage, given that, by definition, gene expres
78 gh the formation of concentration gradients, morphogens drive graded responses to extracellular signa
79                     Our combined approach of morphogen-driven differentiation and transcription-facto
80 ce of dynamical transients for understanding morphogen-driven transcriptional networks and indicates
81 n of germ layer cells induced by a diffusing morphogen during gastrulation.
82 lighting both the subtlety and importance of morphogen dynamics for understanding mammalian embryogen
83 shape oscillations with tissue mechanics and morphogen dynamics.
84                                     NODAL, a morphogen essential for embryogenic patterning, is often
85 l communication systems provide insight into morphogen evolution and a platform for engineering tissu
86 the local concentration but also duration of morphogen exposure is critical for correct cell fate dec
87                                    Synthetic morphogens expressed from a localized source formed a gr
88 y signaling centers, specialized clusters of morphogen-expressing cells.
89 adients, provided the spatial average of the morphogens falls within the region of bistability at the
90  that spreads with minimal loss throughout a morphogen field.
91                        During embryogenesis, morphogens form a concentration gradient in responsive t
92                                However, in a morphogen-free condition, TET1 deficiency significantly
93 racellular space and the direct transport of morphogen from source cell to target cell, for example,
94  development appears normal, suggesting that morphogens from the skull and dura establish optimal ven
95  Vegf-Dll4/Notch feedback loop underlies the morphogen function of Vegfa in vascular patterning.
96  Notch shaping the interpretation of the Shh morphogen gradient and influencing cell fate determinati
97                            By establishing a morphogen gradient at the cellular level, signals become
98             Recent studies of the Drosophila morphogen gradient Bicoid (Bcd), which is required for a
99                                      The Dpp morphogen gradient derived from the anterior stripe of c
100  induction of Notch ligands by the LIN-3/EGF morphogen gradient during vulva induction in Caenorhabdi
101 e latter half of larval development, the Dpp morphogen gradient emanating from the anterior-posterior
102 omeostasis including growth factor function, morphogen gradient formation, and co-receptor activity.
103      To uncover the minimal requirements for morphogen gradient formation, we have engineered a synth
104                            But how the Nodal morphogen gradient forms in vivo remains unclear.
105                   To determine how the Nodal morphogen gradient induces distinct gene expression patt
106 egulation reveal how a kinase translates the morphogen gradient input into cellular orientation.
107 t graded mRNA output is a general feature of morphogen gradient interpretation and discuss how this c
108               We use the interpretation of a morphogen gradient into a single stripe of gene expressi
109  have focused on compensatory changes in the morphogen gradient itself.
110                                            A morphogen gradient of Bone Morphogenetic Protein (BMP) s
111 sal-ventral (DV) embryonic axis depends on a morphogen gradient of Bone Morphogenetic Protein signali
112                                   The Dorsal morphogen gradient patterns the dorsal-ventral axis of t
113                             Thus, the Dorsal morphogen gradient produces three distinct histone signa
114              Thus, growth control by the Dpp morphogen gradient remains under debate.
115 ces differences in patterning time along the morphogen gradient that result in a patterning wave prop
116 rp boundaries and consequently a short-range morphogen gradient that we show is essential for three-d
117 model, the scaling power of the Bicoid (Bcd) morphogen gradient's amplitude nA.
118 ing that Gli TFs are utilized to convey a Hh morphogen gradient, genetic analyses suggest craniofacia
119 l distribution of a signaling molecule, or a morphogen gradient, has been hypothesized to carry posit
120  BMPs would cooperate to establish a unified morphogen gradient.
121 s a paradigm for patterning through a single morphogen gradient.
122 oduce pattern scaling without the need for a morphogen gradient.
123 and destruction collectively shape the Nodal morphogen gradient.
124 ble 3-node network for stripe formation in a morphogen gradient.
125 sion code is regulated by the sonic hedgehog morphogen gradient.
126      This organization arises in response to morphogen gradients acting upstream of a gene regulatory
127 ng have been studied, it remains unclear how morphogen gradients affect this dynamic property of down
128 ded by extracellular soluble factors such as morphogen gradients and cell contact signals, eventually
129 ic inductions as an alternative to classical morphogen gradients and suggests that the range of cell
130 ompting studies into the signaling pathways, morphogen gradients and transcription factors that regul
131 ithelial growth depends on not only chemical morphogen gradients but also mechanical feedback.
132 mechanism by which spatiotemporal changes in morphogen gradients can guide tissue complexity.
133                                              Morphogen gradients direct the spatial patterning of dev
134                                              Morphogen gradients expose cells to different signal con
135                                          How morphogen gradients govern the pattern of gene expressio
136                                      Soluble morphogen gradients have long been studied in the contex
137 e understanding of biophysical mechanisms of morphogen gradients in order to understand emergent phen
138 proach might be useful to study induction by morphogen gradients in other systems.
139 a potentially favored mechanism to establish morphogen gradients in rapidly expanding developmental s
140                                              Morphogen gradients induce sharply defined domains of ge
141 et the quantitative information contained in morphogen gradients is an open question.
142 proposed mechanism for interpreting opposing morphogen gradients is mutual inhibition of downstream t
143 or virtually scale-free self-assembly of the morphogen gradients observed in planarian homeostasis an
144 namic reconfiguration of the droplets in the morphogen gradients produces a diversity of membrane-bou
145                                              Morphogen gradients provide essential spatial informatio
146                                              Morphogen gradients provide positional information durin
147 which elucidates self-assembly mechanisms of morphogen gradients required for robust body-plan contro
148                                              Morphogen gradients specify cell fates during developmen
149 titative interrogations of the properties of morphogen gradients that instruct patterning.
150 helial GREM1 disrupts homeostatic intestinal morphogen gradients, altering cell fate that is normally
151                  They help form and maintain morphogen gradients, guiding cell migration and differen
152 ns of gene expression in response to dynamic morphogen gradients, provided the spatial average of the
153 ate neural tube is patterned by antiparallel morphogen gradients.
154  of expression and diversify the response to morphogen gradients.
155 mation through the interpretation of dynamic morphogen gradients.
156 sing their position with respect to external morphogen gradients.
157 e mRNA of genes downstream of the Wg and Dpp morphogen gradients.
158 vironmental cues, including light, odorants, morphogens, growth factors, and contact with cilia of ot
159 , gradients of secreted signalling molecules-morphogens-guide this process by controlling downstream
160 nt formation, we have engineered a synthetic morphogen in Drosophila wing primordia.
161  single cell fate, contrary to its role as a morphogen in other developmental systems.
162 y is required to upregulate INHBA/Activin, a morphogen in the TGFbeta superfamily.
163  (bone morphogenetic proteins) are essential morphogens in angiogenesis and vascular development.
164  is supported by data from a wide variety of morphogens in developing Drosophila and zebrafish.
165 ed as a paradigm to characterize the role of morphogens in regulating patterning.
166 gnaling expression gradient, equivalent to a morphogen, in an array of interconnected compartments at
167            Epidermal growth factor, a kidney morphogen, increased displacement of the front row of co
168 h that combines quantitative measurements of morphogen-induced gene expression at single-mRNA resolut
169                Here, we engineer a synthetic morphogen-induced mutual inhibition circuit in E. coli p
170 l and experimental framework for engineering morphogen-induced spatial patterning in cell populations
171 edicts that the final boundary position of a morphogen-induced toggle switch, although robust to chan
172             In the vertebrate neural tube, a morphogen-induced transcriptional network produces multi
173                                     Although morphogens initially establish NSC positional identity i
174 mbryo development where spatial gradients of morphogens initiate cellular development.
175 d a characteristic decoding map that relates morphogen input to the positional identity of neural pro
176                        Here we show that Wnt morphogen instructs stereotyped neurite pruning for prop
177                                     Instead, morphogen interpretation is shaped by the kinetics of ta
178                  Hedgehog (Hh) is a secreted morphogen involved in both short- and long-range signali
179 ding and favors the local enrichment of this morphogen involved in myelin regeneration.
180                     PCSK6 activates Nodal, a morphogen involved in regulating left-right body axis de
181 easurement of the temporal change in the Shh morphogen is a plausible mechanism for determining preci
182 reviously we demonstrated that Hedgehog (Hh) morphogen is transported via vesicles along cytonemes em
183 tivity of secreted signaling proteins called morphogens is required for many developmental processes.
184 leal mucosal dynamics as well as a series of morphogen knock-out/inhibition experiments, SEGMEnT prov
185 c stem cells (hESCs) to address how changing morphogen levels influence differentiation, focusing on
186 ves robustness by combining local sensing of morphogen levels with global modulation of gradient spre
187         Auxin, a cardinal plant hormone with morphogen-like properties, has been previously implicate
188              The stiffness gradient requires morphogen-like signaling to regulate BM incorporation, a
189        Further analysis revealed several new morphogenes; loss of one of these, qseC, caused cells to
190 e SHH/GREM1/FGF feedback loop and the Growth/Morphogen models.
191 more precise due to a higher refresh rate of morphogen molecules.
192 igration of cells beyond the gradient of the morphogen Nodal during zebrafish gastrulation.
193                                          The morphogen Nodal was proposed to form a long-range signal
194  hair follicle development to understand how morphogens operate within closely spaced, fate-diverging
195 nic development through stepwise exposure to morphogens, or by conversion of one differentiated cell
196 ociated with a self-activator-self-inhibitor morphogen pair.
197 The CXCR4 chemokine and Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) morphogen pathways are well-validated therapeutic target
198 brate neural tube are archetypal examples of morphogen-patterned tissues that create precise spatial
199  that are likely to be broadly applicable to morphogen-patterned tissues.
200 incorporating a simple feedback loop between morphogen patterning and tissue stretch reproduces a wid
201   Finally, we compare different hypothetical morphogen patterning mechanisms (Turing, tissue-curvatur
202  size in ferret and mouse, which would allow morphogen patterning of the ferret NP.
203 ited, impeding our ability to understand how morphogen patterns regulate tissue shape.
204 ion gradients of biochemical stimuli such as morphogens play a critical role in directing cell fate p
205                                        Nodal morphogens play critical roles in embryonic axis formati
206 the described contact sites might facilitate morphogen presentation and reception.
207 mulation with epidermal growth factor, a key morphogen, primarily increased migration of the front ro
208 -drives-growth" model, in which a diffusible morphogen produced at each notch promotes specified isot
209  We find that direct transport establishes a morphogen profile without adding noise in the process.
210 produced WntD directly impinge on the global morphogen profile.
211                                              Morphogen profiles allow cells to determine their positi
212 on within a developing organism, but not all morphogen profiles form by the same mechanism.
213 kinase, and provides new insight into how Hh morphogen progressively activates Smo.
214 ilage homeostasis, including growth factors, morphogens, proteases, and their inhibitors, and modulat
215                                         Bone morphogen proteins (BMPs) are distributed along a dorsal
216 sitional information provided by specialized morphogen proteins.
217 rovide an important molecular link between a morphogen (RA) and the expression of KIT protein, which
218 a precedent for the control of organ size by morphogen range and the hormonal gating of morphogen act
219 e studies articulate the principles of multi-morphogen RD patterning and demonstrate the utility of p
220               Our active description couples morphogen reaction and diffusion, which impact cell diff
221 WASH complex component strumpellin or the ER morphogen REEP1.
222                         How thresholds in HH morphogen regulate SMO to promote switch-like transcript
223                                              Morphogens regulate tissue patterning through their dist
224 ork to explain the temporospatial pattern of morphogen-regulated gene expression.
225 and we propose that RTN, like other membrane morphogens, rely on APHs for their function.
226 en cells temporally integrate signals from a morphogen remains unclear.
227 ll arose from the evolutionary cooption of a morphogen-responsive function in wound repair.
228 echanism in which a changing gradient of the morphogen retinoic acid regulates the expression of guid
229 a model, Tissue Expansion-Modulated Maternal Morphogen Scaling (TEM(3)S), to study scaled anterior-po
230                How such localization affects morphogen sensing and patterning in the developing embry
231     Here, we demonstrate a critical role for morphogen sensing by a gene enhancer, which ultimately d
232 ate use of these devices to spatially define morphogen signal gradients and direct peri-gastrulation
233 tors form stereotypic patterns despite noisy morphogen signaling and large-scale cellular rearrangeme
234 ow these inputs are interpreted, we measured morphogen signaling and target gene expression in mouse
235                                              Morphogen signaling contributes to the patterned spatiot
236  localization and embryo geometry in shaping morphogen signaling during embryogenesis.
237 ng of tissues in embryos and adults, but how morphogen signaling gradients are generated in tissues r
238                 CIPF explicitly links graded morphogen signaling in the telencephalon to switch-like
239                                              Morphogen signaling is critical for the growth and patte
240 (hESCs) in vitro Systematic investigation of morphogen signaling is hampered by the difficulty of dis
241 l tension regulates development by modifying morphogen signaling is less clear.
242 the signaling mechanisms that disperse these morphogen signaling proteins remain controversial.
243 e from biochemical mechanisms that calibrate morphogen signaling strength, a conclusion broadly relev
244 hogenesis over distances beyond the range of morphogen signaling.
245 rganizers that is a secondary consequence of morphogen signaling.
246                 This is often achieved using morphogens, signaling molecules that form spatially vary
247 ing establishment and maintenance of BMP/Dpp morphogen signalling during Drosophila wing development.
248  Our data propose a novel mechanism by which morphogen signalling is regulated.
249 time-specific and reversible manipulation of morphogen signalling.
250 er of proteins have been suggested to act as morphogens-signalling molecules that spread within tissu
251                                              Morphogen signals are essential for cell fate specificat
252                             FGF and Hedgehog morphogen signals are required, with FGF providing a dir
253 ered genes that modify the interpretation of morphogen signals by regulating protein-trafficking even
254           In the vertebrate neural tube, the morphogen Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) establishes a characteris
255 neural tube in response to a gradient of the morphogen Sonic hedgehog (SHH) in the chick and zebra fi
256 domain of mid1 expression, controlled by the morphogen Sonic hedgehog (Shh).
257 brate forebrain development via the secreted morphogen Sonic hedgehog (Shh).
258  a patterning wave propagating away from the morphogen source with a velocity determined by the intri
259                                          The morphogen SpmX defines the site of stalk PG synthesis, b
260                      The mechanisms by which morphogens spread through a tissue to establish such a m
261 hoices are regulated by interactions between morphogens such as activin/nodal, BMPs and Wnt/beta-cate
262 nized around a coordinate system provided by morphogens such as the TGF-beta homolog Decapentaplegic
263 m (medial patterning center), which produces morphogens such as Wnt3a, generates Cajal-Retzius neuron
264                     Spatial distributions of morphogens, such as BMP-4, play important roles in the p
265 odic modulation of the concentrations of the morphogens, sustained by local activation and long-range
266              Despite their simplicity, these morphogen systems yielded patterns reminiscent of those
267 pmental responses to BMP gradients and other morphogen systems.
268   Here we demonstrate a negative role of the morphogen TGF-beta in tempering these signals under phys
269                                    Wnt3 is a morphogen that activates the Wnt signaling pathway and r
270 ecapentaplegic has long been thought to be a morphogen that controls patterning and growth in Drosoph
271 ssion of genes activated by Dorsal (Dl), the morphogen that patterns the dorsoventral axis.
272 dly, we identified wingless (wg), a secreted morphogen that regulates synaptic growth at the Drosophi
273 limb is dependent on Sonic hedgehog (Shh), a morphogen that regulates the activity of Gli transcripti
274        Dpp, a member of the BMP family, is a morphogen that specifies positional information in Droso
275 f neural progenitors to Shh and BMP, the two morphogens that are responsible for patterning the ventr
276 ts of extracellular metabolites act as tumor morphogens that impose order within the microenvironment
277                 Embryogenesis is directed by morphogens that induce differentiation within a defined
278               Hedgehog proteins are secreted morphogens that play critical roles in development and d
279 or neural stem cells with growth factors and morphogens that recapitulate exogenous developmental sig
280 genetic proteins 4 and 7 (BMP4 and BMP7) are morphogens that signal as either homodimers or heterodim
281 is no strict correspondence between specific morphogen thresholds and boundary positions.
282 r two canonical mechanisms: the diffusion of morphogen through extracellular space and the direct tra
283                  MuSK interacts with the Wnt morphogens, through its Frizzled-like domain (cysteine-r
284 broblast Growth Factor, FGF8, disperses as a morphogen to establish the rostral to caudal axis of the
285 aginal disc cells and functions as a classic morphogen to regulate pattern and growth by diffusing th
286 that the BMPs act as concentration-dependent morphogens to direct IN identity, analogous to the manne
287 l reaction-diffusion gradients of artificial morphogens to induce morphological differentiation and s
288 ibuted in gradients subsequently function as morphogens to subdivide the three germ layers into disti
289 anobodies to the receptors of Dpp, a natural morphogen, to render them responsive to extracellular GF
290 al structure, and sets the platform on which morphogens, transcription programs, and synaptic activit
291  simulations and in vivo experiments how Wnt morphogen transport by cytonemes differs from typically
292  migration and apoptosis, independent of the morphogen transport mechanism.
293         We conclude that a cytoneme-mediated morphogen transport together with directed cell sorting
294 etic studies support cytoneme involvement in morphogen transport, mechanistic insight into how they a
295 inimal model combining tissue mechanics with morphogen turnover and transport to explore routes to pa
296                          Vector transport of morphogens was identified as a fundamental requirement t
297 leds (Fzd) are the primary receptors for Wnt morphogens, which are essential regulators of stem cell
298 in-growing thalamic axons, which secrete the morphogen Wingless-related MMTV (mouse mammary tumor vir
299 cadherins Fat and Dachsous, organized by the morphogens Wingless and Decapentaplegic, suppress Warts
300                                As a secreted morphogen with diverse functions, Fgf8 expression is lik

 
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