2 results match your criteria: "Skirball Institute at NYU School of Medicine and Howard Hughes Medical Institute[Affiliation]"
Development
October 2004
Developmental Genetics Program, Skirball Institute and Department of Cell Biology at NYU School of Medicine and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 540 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016, USA.
In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, both spermatogenesis and oogenesis rely on germ-line stem cells (GSCs). Intensive research has revealed many of the molecules and pathways that underlie GSC maintenance and differentiation in males and females. In this review, we discuss new studies that, some differences notwithstanding, highlight the similarities in the structural and molecular strategies used by the two sexes in GSC maintenance and differentiation.
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December 2003
Developmental Genetics Program, Skirball Institute at NYU School of Medicine and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 540 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016, USA.
Gap junctions coordinate processes ranging from muscle contraction to ovarian follicle development. Here we show that the gap junction protein Zero population growth (Zpg) is required for germ cell differentiation in the Drosophila ovary. In the absence of Zpg the stem cell daughter destined to differentiate dies.
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