Publications by authors named "M Laurin"

During embryogenesis, cells arrange into precise patterns that enable tissues and organs to develop specialized functions. Despite its critical importance, the molecular choreography behind these collective cellular behaviors remains elusive, posing a major challenge in developmental biology and limiting advances in regenerative medicine. By using the mouse hair follicle as a mini-organ system to study the formation of bud-like structures during embryonic development, our work uncovers a crucial role for the Rho GTPase regulator ARHGEF3 in hair follicle morphogenesis.

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  • This work challenges the classical view that thirst and sodium appetite are separate motivations, proposing instead that they are part of a single underlying motivation influenced by dehydration.
  • It introduces the concept of "intervenient variable" to explain how different types of dehydration (extracellular vs. intracellular) can trigger behavioral responses that are regulated by specific brain regions.
  • The study also draws parallels between the sodium appetite observed in rats and thirst-like behaviors in marine animals, suggesting a common ancestral origin for these motivations and their role in the adaptation of tetrapods moving from aquatic to terrestrial environments.
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Differences in the physical and behavioral attributes of prey are likely to impose disparate demands of force and speed on the jaws of a predator. Because of biomechanical trade-offs between force and speed, this presents an interesting conundrum for predators of diverse prey types. Loggerhead shrikes (Lanius ludovicianus) are medium-sized (∼50 g) passeriform birds that dispatch and feed on a variety of arthropod and vertebrate prey, primarily using their beaks.

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The subcellular distribution of the polarity protein Yurt (Yrt) is subjected to a spatio-temporal regulation in Drosophila melanogaster embryonic epithelia. After cellularization, Yrt binds to the lateral membrane of ectodermal cells and maintains this localization throughout embryogenesis. During terminal differentiation of the epidermis, Yrt accumulates at septate junctions and is also recruited to the apical domain.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Fossilized Birth-Death (FBD) process has been used to explore biodiversity evolution by creating models that utilize fossil ages to generate phylogenetic trees without needing divergence times.
  • *The researchers developed methods to evaluate hypotheses about diversification, such as detecting mass extinctions or changes in fossilization rates, by applying the skyline FBD model and estimating parameters using simulations.
  • *The study applies these methods to an updated dataset on Permo-Carboniferous synapsids to investigate biodiversity dynamics in specific clades and to determine support for previously suggested mass extinction events.
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