5 results match your criteria: "The Netherlands. a.j.durston@biology.leidenuniv.nl[Affiliation]"
Dev Dyn
November 2012
Institute of Biology, University of Leiden, Sylvius Laboratory, Leiden, The Netherlands.
We reach the conclusion that posterior prevalence, a collinear property considered important for Hox complex function, is so far unique, in a global form, to vertebrates. Why is this? We suspect this is because posterior prevalence is explicitly connected to the vertebrate form of Hox temporal collinearity, which is central to axial patterning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScientificWorldJournal
July 2012
Sylvius Laboratory, Institute of Biology, University of Leiden, Wassenaarseweg 72, 2333 BE Leiden, The Netherlands.
While still at school, most of us are deeply impressed by the underlying principles that so beautifully explain why the chemical elements are ordered as they are in the periodic table, and may wonder, with the theoretician Brian Goodwin, "whether there might be equally powerful principles that account for the awe-inspiring diversity of body forms in the living realm". We have considered the arguments for developmental principles, conclude that they do exist and have specifically identified features that may generate principles associated with Hox patterning of the main body axis in bilaterian metazoa in general and in the vertebrates in particular. We wonder whether this exercise serves any purpose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Dev Biol
May 2012
Institute of Biology, University of Leiden, Sylvius Laboratory, Wassenaarseweg, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Hox collinearity is a spectacular phenomenon that has excited life scientists since its discovery in 1978. Two mechanisms have been proposed to explain the spatially sequential pattern of Hox gene expression in animal embryonic development: interactions among Hox genes, or the progressive opening of chromatin in the Hox clusters, from 3' to 5'. A review of the evidence across different species and developmental stages points to the universal involvement of trans-acting factors and cell-cell interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScientificWorldJournal
November 2010
Sylvius Laboratory, Leiden, The Netherlands.
We review a recently discovered developmental mechanism. Anterior-posterior positional information for the vertebrate trunk is generated by sequential interactions between a timer in the early nonorganizer mesoderm (NOM) and the Spemann organizer (SO). The timer is characterized by temporally collinear activation of a series of Hox genes in the early ventral and lateral mesoderm (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenomics
May 2010
Sylvius Laboratory, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Here, we review a recently discovered developmental mechanism. Anterior-posterior positional information for the vertebrate trunk is generated by sequential interactions between a timer in the early non-organiser mesoderm and the Spemann organiser. The timer is characterised by temporally colinear activation of a series of Hox genes in the early ventral and lateral mesoderm (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF