Tissue-specific stem cells: lessons from the skeletal muscle satellite cell.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] T. Hornberger. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Regulation of skeletal muscle mass in mice by a new TGF-beta superfamily member. , 2014 .
[2] Tom H. Cheung,et al. Alternative polyadenylation mediates microRNA regulation of muscle stem cell function. , 2012, Cell stem cell.
[3] Yu Xin Wang,et al. Building muscle: molecular regulation of myogenesis. , 2012, Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology.
[4] D. Castel,et al. A Critical Requirement for Notch Signaling in Maintenance of the Quiescent Skeletal Muscle Stem Cell State , 2012, Stem cells.
[5] Tom H. Cheung,et al. Notch Signaling Is Necessary to Maintain Quiescence in Adult Muscle Stem Cells , 2012, Stem cells.
[6] M. Blasco,et al. A Subpopulation of Adult Skeletal Muscle Stem Cells Retains All Template DNA Strands after Cell Division , 2012, Cell.
[7] Tom H. Cheung,et al. Maintenance of muscle stem cell quiescence by microRNA-489 , 2012, Nature.
[8] Yu Xin Wang,et al. Satellite cells, the engines of muscle repair , 2011, Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology.
[9] Z. Yablonka-Reuveni. The Skeletal Muscle Satellite Cell , 2011, The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society.
[10] S. Antonini,et al. Pericytes resident in postnatal skeletal muscle differentiate into muscle fibres and generate satellite cells. , 2011, Nature communications.
[11] Irving L. Weissman,et al. Tracking single hematopoietic stem cells in vivo using high-throughput sequencing in conjunction with viral genetic barcoding , 2011, Nature Biotechnology.
[12] Christoph Lepper,et al. An absolute requirement for Pax7-positive satellite cells in acute injury-induced skeletal muscle regeneration , 2011, Development.
[13] B. Malissen,et al. Pax7-expressing satellite cells are indispensable for adult skeletal muscle regeneration , 2011, Development.
[14] Kenneth S. Campbell,et al. Effective fiber hypertrophy in satellite cell-depleted skeletal muscle , 2011, Development.
[15] B. Alman,et al. Pax7 Expressing Cells Contribute to Dermal Wound Repair, Regulating Scar Size through a β‐Catenin Mediated Process , 2011, Stem cells.
[16] P. Zammit,et al. The muscle satellite cell at 50: the formative years , 2011, Skeletal Muscle.
[17] M. Gautel,et al. Transcriptional mechanisms regulating skeletal muscle differentiation, growth and homeostasis , 2011, Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology.
[18] David Salgado,et al. Neural crest regulates myogenesis through the transient activation of NOTCH , 2011, Nature.
[19] M. Kyba,et al. Assessment of the Myogenic Stem Cell Compartment Following Transplantation of Pax3/Pax7‐Induced Embryonic Stem Cell‐Derived Progenitors , 2011, Stem cells.
[20] M. Rudnicki,et al. Polycomb EZH2 controls self-renewal and safeguards the transcriptional identity of skeletal muscle stem cells. , 2011, Genes & development.
[21] T. Rando,et al. Stem cell ageing and non-random chromosome segregation , 2011, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[22] D. Goldhamer,et al. Skeletal Muscle Satellite Cells Are Committed to Myogenesis and Do Not Spontaneously Adopt Nonmyogenic Fates , 2011, The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society.
[23] S. Delp,et al. Short Telomeres and Stem Cell Exhaustion Model Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy in mdx/mTR Mice , 2010, Cell.
[24] K. Hanaoka,et al. Notch3 Null Mutation in Mice Causes Muscle Hyperplasia by Repetitive Muscle Regeneration , 2010, Stem cells.
[25] A. Mai,et al. TNF/p38α/polycomb signaling to Pax7 locus in satellite cells links inflammation to the epigenetic control of muscle regeneration. , 2010, Cell stem cell.
[26] Y. Yamashita. Cell adhesion in regulation of asymmetric stem cell division. , 2010, Current opinion in cell biology.
[27] Hans Clevers,et al. Intestinal Crypt Homeostasis Results from Neutral Competition between Symmetrically Dividing Lgr5 Stem Cells , 2010, Cell.
[28] S. Thrun,et al. Substrate Elasticity Regulates Skeletal Muscle Stem Cell Self-Renewal in Culture , 2010, Science.
[29] M. Rudnicki,et al. Extrinsic regulation of satellite cell specification , 2010, Stem Cell Research & Therapy.
[30] Christoph Lepper,et al. Inducible lineage tracing of Pax7‐descendant cells reveals embryonic origin of adult satellite cells , 2010, Genesis.
[31] A. Brack,et al. Muscle stem cells and reversible quiescence: The role of sprouty , 2010, Cell cycle.
[32] R. Braun,et al. Functional Hierarchy and Reversibility Within the Murine Spermatogenic Stem Cell Compartment , 2010, Science.
[33] D. Sassoon,et al. Identification and characterization of a non-satellite cell muscle resident progenitor during postnatal development , 2010, Nature Cell Biology.
[34] Robert B. White,et al. Dynamics of muscle fibre growth during postnatal mouse development , 2010, BMC Developmental Biology.
[35] K. Tsuchida,et al. Mesenchymal progenitors distinct from satellite cells contribute to ectopic fat cell formation in skeletal muscle , 2010, Nature Cell Biology.
[36] J. Licht,et al. Sprouty1 Regulates Reversible Quiescence of a Self-Renewing Adult Muscle Stem Cell Pool during Regeneration , 2010, Cell stem cell.
[37] Michael A. Rudnicki,et al. Muscle injury activates resident fibro/adipogenic progenitors that facilitate myogenesis , 2010, Nature Cell Biology.
[38] A. Cumano,et al. Pax3:Foxc2 reciprocal repression in the somite modulates muscular versus vascular cell fate choice in multipotent progenitors. , 2009, Developmental cell.
[39] A. Cumano,et al. Numb Promotes an Increase in Skeletal Muscle Progenitor Cells in the Embryonic Somite , 2009, Stem cells.
[40] S. Tajbakhsh,et al. Asymmetric cell divisions and asymmetric cell fates. , 2009, Annual review of cell and developmental biology.
[41] M. Buckingham,et al. Distinct and dynamic myogenic populations in the vertebrate embryo. , 2009, Current opinion in genetics & development.
[42] M. Rudnicki,et al. Autocrine and paracrine angiopoietin 1/Tie-2 signaling promotes muscle satellite cell self-renewal. , 2009, Cell stem cell.
[43] D. Goldhamer,et al. Progenitors of skeletal muscle satellite cells express the muscle determination gene, MyoD. , 2009, Developmental biology.
[44] Christoph Lepper,et al. Adult satellite cells and embryonic muscle progenitors have distinct genetic requirements , 2009, Nature.
[45] M. Rudnicki,et al. Transcriptional networks that regulate muscle stem cell function , 2009, Wiley interdisciplinary reviews. Systems biology and medicine.
[46] M. Rudnicki,et al. Wnt7a activates the planar cell polarity pathway to drive the symmetric expansion of satellite stem cells. , 2009, Cell stem cell.
[47] G. Kardon,et al. Embryonic and fetal limb myogenic cells are derived from developmentally distinct progenitors and have different requirements for beta-catenin. , 2009, Genes & development.
[48] Shinya Yamanaka,et al. A Fresh Look at iPS Cells , 2009, Cell.
[49] K. Day,et al. A distinct profile of myogenic regulatory factor detection within Pax7+ cells at S phase supports a unique role of Myf5 during posthatch chicken myogenesis , 2009, Developmental dynamics : an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists.
[50] John K. Hall,et al. Syndecan-4-expressing muscle progenitor cells in the SP engraft as satellite cells during muscle regeneration. , 2009, Cell stem cell.
[51] Andreas Trumpp,et al. Hematopoietic Stem Cells Reversibly Switch from Dormancy to Self-Renewal during Homeostasis and Repair , 2008, Cell.
[52] M. Kyba,et al. Prospective Isolation of Skeletal Muscle Stem Cells with a Pax7 Reporter , 2008, Stem cells.
[53] H. Blau,et al. Self-renewal and expansion of single transplanted muscle stem cells , 2008, Nature.
[54] R. Tjian,et al. Codependent activators direct myoblast-specific MyoD transcription. , 2008, Developmental cell.
[55] George Q. Daley,et al. Disease-Specific Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells , 2008, Cell.
[56] Concepcion R. Nierras,et al. The promise of human induced pluripotent stem cells for research and therapy , 2008, Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology.
[57] T. Borchardt,et al. Different autonomous myogenic cell populations revealed by ablation of Myf5-expressing cells during mouse embryogenesis , 2008, Development.
[58] M. Capecchi,et al. Two cell lineages, myf5 and myf5-independent, participate in mouse skeletal myogenesis. , 2008, Developmental cell.
[59] Sean J. Morrison,et al. Stem Cells and Niches: Mechanisms That Promote Stem Cell Maintenance throughout Life , 2008, Cell.
[60] D. Scadden,et al. Deconstructing stem cell self-renewal: genetic insights into cell-cycle regulation , 2008, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[61] M. Rudnicki,et al. The emerging biology of satellite cells and their therapeutic potential. , 2008, Trends in molecular medicine.
[62] Nicholas Ling,et al. Myostatin signals through Pax7 to regulate satellite cell self-renewal. , 2008, Experimental cell research.
[63] M. Rudnicki,et al. Niche regulation of muscle satellite cell self-renewal and differentiation. , 2008, Cell stem cell.
[64] T. Rando,et al. Intrinsic Changes and Extrinsic Influences of Myogenic Stem Cell Function During Aging , 2007, Stem Cell Reviews.
[65] K. Esser,et al. Counterpoint: Satellite cell addition is not obligatory for skeletal muscle hypertrophy. , 2007, Journal of applied physiology.
[66] C. Keller,et al. Increased Wnt Signaling During Aging Alters Muscle Stem Cell Fate and Increases Fibrosis , 2007, Science.
[67] T. Rando,et al. Regulation of Pax3 by Proteasomal Degradation of Monoubiquitinated Protein in Skeletal Muscle Progenitors , 2007, Cell.
[68] S. Tapscott,et al. Reciprocal inhibition between Pax7 and muscle regulatory factors modulates myogenic cell fate determination , 2007, The Journal of cell biology.
[69] M. Rudnicki,et al. Asymmetric Self-Renewal and Commitment of Satellite Stem Cells in Muscle , 2007, Cell.
[70] A. Bird. Perceptions of epigenetics , 2007, Nature.
[71] M. Rudnicki,et al. Stem and progenitor cells in skeletal muscle development, maintenance, and therapy. , 2007, Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy.
[72] T. Rando,et al. High Incidence of Non-Random Template Strand Segregation and Asymmetric Fate Determination In Dividing Stem Cells and their Progeny , 2007, PLoS biology.
[73] G. Bassez,et al. Muscle satellite cells and endothelial cells: close neighbors and privileged partners. , 2007, Molecular biology of the cell.
[74] B. Sacchetti,et al. Pericytes of human skeletal muscle are myogenic precursors distinct from satellite cells , 2007, Nature Cell Biology.
[75] Y. Nabeshima,et al. Functional identification of the actual and potential stem cell compartments in mouse spermatogenesis. , 2007, Developmental cell.
[76] Giulio Cossu,et al. Mesoangioblast stem cells ameliorate muscle function in dystrophic dogs , 2006, Nature.
[77] Z. Yablonka-Reuveni,et al. The Skeletal Muscle Satellite Cell: The Stem Cell That Came in From the Cold , 2006, The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society.
[78] M. Buckingham,et al. A novel genetic hierarchy functions during hypaxial myogenesis: Pax3 directly activates Myf5 in muscle progenitor cells in the limb. , 2006, Genes & development.
[79] S. Sen,et al. Matrix Elasticity Directs Stem Cell Lineage Specification , 2006, Cell.
[80] Barbara Gayraud-Morel,et al. Asymmetric division and cosegregation of template DNA strands in adult muscle satellite cells , 2006, Nature Cell Biology.
[81] C. Tabin,et al. Somitic origin of limb muscle satellite and side population cells. , 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[82] M. Rudnicki,et al. Distinct roles for Pax7 and Pax3 in adult regenerative myogenesis , 2006, The Journal of cell biology.
[83] A. Cumano,et al. Pax3 and Pax7 have distinct and overlapping functions in adult muscle progenitor cells , 2006, The Journal of cell biology.
[84] Simon M. Hughes,et al. Evidence that satellite cell decrement contributes to preferential decline in nuclear number from large fibres during murine age-related muscle atrophy , 2005, Journal of Cell Science.
[85] Charlotte Collins,et al. Direct Isolation of Satellite Cells for Skeletal Muscle Regeneration , 2005, Science.
[86] A. Petrie,et al. Stem Cell Function, Self-Renewal, and Behavioral Heterogeneity of Cells from the Adult Muscle Satellite Cell Niche , 2005, Cell.
[87] M. Hoshino,et al. Bone Marrow Stromal Cells Generate Muscle Cells and Repair Muscle Degeneration , 2005, Science.
[88] C. Marcelle,et al. A common somitic origin for embryonic muscle progenitors and satellite cells , 2005, Nature.
[89] A. Mansouri,et al. A Pax3/Pax7-dependent population of skeletal muscle progenitor cells , 2005, Nature.
[90] Shahragim Tajbakhsh,et al. Pax3/Pax7 mark a novel population of primitive myogenic cells during development. , 2005, Genes & development.
[91] N. Jones,et al. The p38α/β MAPK functions as a molecular switch to activate the quiescent satellite cell , 2005, The Journal of cell biology.
[92] I. Weissman,et al. Rejuvenation of aged progenitor cells by exposure to a young systemic environment , 2005, Nature.
[93] T. Shavlakadze,et al. Insulin-like growth factor I slows the rate of denervation induced skeletal muscle atrophy , 2005, Neuromuscular Disorders.
[94] J. Tidball. Inflammatory processes in muscle injury and repair. , 2005, American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology.
[95] I. Weissman,et al. Determinants of Skeletal Muscle Contributions from Circulating Cells, Bone Marrow Cells, and Hematopoietic Stem Cells , 2004, Stem cells.
[96] C. Washabaugh,et al. Nonmuscle stem cells fail to significantly contribute to regeneration of normal muscle , 2004, Gene Therapy.
[97] B. Olwin,et al. Pax-7 up-regulation inhibits myogenesis and cell cycle progression in satellite cells: a potential mechanism for self-renewal. , 2004, Developmental biology.
[98] M. Rudnicki,et al. Muscle satellite cell-specific genes identified by genetic profiling of MyoD-deficient myogenic cell. , 2004, Developmental biology.
[99] I. Weissman,et al. Isolation of Adult Mouse Myogenic Progenitors Functional Heterogeneity of Cells within and Engrafting Skeletal Muscle , 2004, Cell.
[100] S. Price,et al. Insulin-like growth factor I: the yin and yang of muscle atrophy. , 2004, Endocrinology.
[101] O. Halevy,et al. Pattern of Pax7 expression during myogenesis in the posthatch chicken establishes a model for satellite cell differentiation and renewal , 2004, Developmental dynamics : an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists.
[102] G. Shefer,et al. Skeletal muscle satellite cells can spontaneously enter an alternative mesenchymal pathway , 2004, Journal of Cell Science.
[103] Se-Jin Lee. Regulation of muscle mass by myostatin. , 2004, Annual review of cell and developmental biology.
[104] Barbara Gayraud-Morel,et al. Mrf4 determines skeletal muscle identity in Myf5:Myod double-mutant mice , 2004, Nature.
[105] H. Blau,et al. Hematopoietic contribution to skeletal muscle regeneration by myelomonocytic precursors. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[106] T. Braun,et al. Pax7 directs postnatal renewal and propagation of myogenic satellite cells but not their specification , 2004, The EMBO journal.
[107] L. Guigand,et al. Muscle satellite cell heterogeneity: in vitro and in vivo evidences for populations that fuse differently , 2004, Cell and Tissue Research.
[108] G. Pavlath,et al. The COX-2 pathway is essential during early stages of skeletal muscle regeneration. , 2004, American journal of physiology. Cell physiology.
[109] S. Krauss,et al. Continuing role for mouse Numb and Numbl in maintaining progenitor cells during cortical neurogenesis , 2004, Nature Neuroscience.
[110] B. Ames. Delaying the Mitochondrial Decay of Aging , 2004, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[111] P. Quesenberry,et al. Robust conversion of marrow cells to skeletal muscle with formation of marrow-derived muscle cell colonies: a multifactorial process. , 2004, Experimental hematology.
[112] Ahmed Mansouri,et al. Divergent functions of murine Pax3 and Pax7 in limb muscle development. , 2004, Genes & development.
[113] J. Downward. PI 3-kinase, Akt and cell survival. , 2004, Seminars in cell & developmental biology.
[114] E. Carmeli,et al. Matrix metalloproteinases and skeletal muscle: A brief review , 2004, Muscle & nerve.
[115] E. Fuchs,et al. Defining the Epithelial Stem Cell Niche in Skin , 2004, Science.
[116] D. Gerrard,et al. Ectopic expression of IGF‐I and Shh by skeletal muscle inhibits disuse‐mediated skeletal muscle atrophy and bone osteopenia in vivo , 2004, FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.
[117] G. Bassez,et al. Satellite cells attract monocytes and use macrophages as a support to escape apoptosis and enhance muscle growth , 2003, The Journal of cell biology.
[118] W. Kuzon,et al. Satellite cell depletion in degenerative skeletal muscle , 2003, Apoptosis.
[119] Gayle M. Smythe,et al. Notch-Mediated Restoration of Regenerative Potential to Aged Muscle , 2003, Science.
[120] Irving L Weissman,et al. Biology of hematopoietic stem cells and progenitors: implications for clinical application. , 2003, Annual review of immunology.
[121] F. Camargo,et al. Single hematopoietic stem cells generate skeletal muscle through myeloid intermediates , 2003, Nature Medicine.
[122] Lin Yi,et al. Contribution of hematopoietic stem cells to skeletal muscle , 2003, Nature Medicine.
[123] Seumas McCroskery,et al. Myostatin negatively regulates satellite cell activation and self-renewal , 2003, The Journal of cell biology.
[124] T. Noakes,et al. Athletes with exercise-associated fatigue have abnormally short muscle DNA telomeres. , 2003, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.
[125] T. Partridge,et al. Muscle satellite cells. , 2003, The international journal of biochemistry & cell biology.
[126] J. Isner,et al. Postnatal Recapitulation of Embryonic Hedgehog Pathway in Response to Skeletal Muscle Ischemia , 2003, Circulation.
[127] N. Bresolin,et al. Cell Therapy of α-Sarcoglycan Null Dystrophic Mice Through Intra-Arterial Delivery of Mesoangioblasts , 2003, Science.
[128] K. Mamchaoui,et al. Telomerase can extend the proliferative capacity of human myoblasts, but does not lead to their immortalization. , 2003, Molecular cancer research : MCR.
[129] B. Zheng,et al. Muscle stem cells differentiate into haematopoietic lineages but retain myogenic potential , 2003, Nature Cell Biology.
[130] M. Rudnicki,et al. Wnt Signaling Induces the Myogenic Specification of Resident CD45+ Adult Stem Cells during Muscle Regeneration , 2003, Cell.
[131] H. Jockusch,et al. Migration of adult myogenic precursor cells as revealed by GFP/nLacZ labelling of mouse transplantation chimeras , 2003, Journal of Cell Science.
[132] J. Hoeijmakers,et al. Aging and Genome Maintenance: Lessons from the Mouse? , 2003, Science.
[133] S. Melov,et al. Oxidative stress and aging: beyond correlation , 2002, Aging cell.
[134] Helen M. Blau,et al. Biological Progression from Adult Bone Marrow to Mononucleate Muscle Stem Cell to Multinucleate Muscle Fiber in Response to Injury , 2002, Cell.
[135] Y. Jan,et al. Progenitor cell maintenance requires numb and numblike during mouse neurogenesis , 2002, Nature.
[136] M. Rudnicki,et al. Myogenic specification of side population cells in skeletal muscle , 2002, The Journal of cell biology.
[137] Gillian Butler-Browne,et al. Human skeletal muscle satellite cells: aging, oxidative stress and the mitotic clock , 2002, Experimental Gerontology.
[138] L. Kunkel,et al. Long-term persistence of donor nuclei in a Duchenne muscular dystrophy patient receiving bone marrow transplantation. , 2002, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[139] T. Rando,et al. The regulation of Notch signaling controls satellite cell activation and cell fate determination in postnatal myogenesis. , 2002, Developmental cell.
[140] D. Watt,et al. Muscle stem cells , 2002, The Journal of pathology.
[141] M. Baiocchi,et al. The meso-angioblast: a multipotent, self-renewing cell that originates from the dorsal aorta and differentiates into most mesodermal tissues. , 2002, Development.
[142] H. S. Neto,et al. Impaired regeneration of dystrophin-deficient muscle fibers is caused by exhaustion of myogenic cells. , 2002, Brazilian journal of medical and biological research = Revista brasileira de pesquisas medicas e biologicas.
[143] T. Zimmers,et al. Induction of Cachexia in Mice by Systemically Administered Myostatin , 2002, Science.
[144] Hiroshi Yamamoto,et al. Muscle regeneration by reconstitution with bone marrow or fetal liver cells from green fluorescent protein-gene transgenic mice. , 2002, Journal of cell science.
[145] S. McKinney-Freeman,et al. Muscle-derived hematopoietic stem cells are hematopoietic in origin , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[146] B. Olwin,et al. Syndecan-3 and syndecan-4 specifically mark skeletal muscle satellite cells and are implicated in satellite cell maintenance and muscle regeneration. , 2001, Developmental biology.
[147] John C. Doyle,et al. Oxygen‐mediated regulation of skeletal muscle satellite cell proliferation and adipogenesis in culture , 2001, Journal of cellular physiology.
[148] M. Rudnicki,et al. Muscle satellite cells are multipotential stem cells that exhibit myogenic, osteogenic, and adipogenic differentiation. , 2001, Differentiation; research in biological diversity.
[149] S. Tajbakhsh,et al. Transplanted primary neonatal myoblasts can give rise to functional satellite cells as identified using the Myf5nlacZl+ mouse , 2001, Gene Therapy.
[150] B. Langley,et al. Myostatin, a Negative Regulator of Muscle Growth, Functions by Inhibiting Myoblast Proliferation* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[151] A. Wernig,et al. Expression of Cd34 and Myf5 Defines the Majority of Quiescent Adult Skeletal Muscle Satellite Cells , 2000, The Journal of cell biology.
[152] M. Lawlor,et al. Coordinate Control of Muscle Cell Survival by Distinct Insulin-like Growth Factor Activated Signaling Pathways , 2000, The Journal of cell biology.
[153] C. Birchmeier,et al. Genes that control the development of migrating muscle precursor cells. , 2000, Current opinion in cell biology.
[154] A. Vignery,et al. Osteoclasts and giant cells: macrophage–macrophage fusion mechanism , 2000, International journal of experimental pathology.
[155] U. Galderisi,et al. Increased expression of IGF‐binding protein‐5 in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) fibroblasts correlates with the fibroblast‐induced downregulation of DMD myoblast growth: An in vitro analysis , 2000, Journal of cellular physiology.
[156] M. Rudnicki,et al. Pax7 Is Required for the Specification of Myogenic Satellite Cells , 2000, Cell.
[157] T. Braun,et al. Myf-5 Revisited Loss of Early Myotome Formation Does Not Lead to a Rib Phenotype in Homozygous Myf-5 Mutant Mice , 2000, Cell.
[158] S. Schiaffino,et al. Control of muscle fibre size: a crucial factor in ageing. , 1999, Acta physiologica Scandinavica.
[159] R. Allen,et al. Skeletal muscle satellite cell proliferation in response to members of the fibroblast growth factor family and hepatocyte growth factor , 1999, Journal of cellular physiology.
[160] T. Partridge,et al. Patterns of repair of dystrophic mouse muscle: Studies on isolated fibers , 1999, Developmental dynamics : an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists.
[161] R. Mulligan,et al. Dystrophin expression in the mdx mouse restored by stem cell transplantation , 1999, Nature.
[162] S. Artavanis-Tsakonas,et al. Notch signaling: cell fate control and signal integration in development. , 1999, Science.
[163] J. Epstein,et al. Pax3 functions in cell survival and in pax7 regulation. , 1999, Development.
[164] T. Partridge,et al. Dynamics of Myoblast Transplantation Reveal a Discrete Minority of Precursors with Stem Cell–like Properties as the Myogenic Source , 1999, The Journal of cell biology.
[165] L. Lescaudron,et al. Blood borne macrophages are essential for the triggering of muscle regeneration following muscle transplant , 1999, Neuromuscular Disorders.
[166] M. Grounds. Age‐associated Changes in the Response of Skeletal Muscle Cells to Exercise and Regeneration a , 1998, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[167] G. Cossu,et al. Differential activation of Myf5 and MyoD by different Wnts in explants of mouse paraxial mesoderm and the later activation of myogenesis in the absence of Myf5. , 1998, Development.
[168] Wei Zhang,et al. Overlapping functions of the myogenic bHLH genes MRF4 and MyoD revealed in double mutant mice. , 1998, Development.
[169] Y. Nabeshima,et al. Cell heterogeneity upon myogenic differentiation: down-regulation of MyoD and Myf-5 generates 'reserve cells'. , 1998, Journal of cell science.
[170] G Cossu,et al. Muscle regeneration by bone marrow-derived myogenic progenitors. , 1998, Science.
[171] C. Emerson,et al. Control of somite patterning by Sonic hedgehog and its downstream signal response genes. , 1998, Development.
[172] B. Wold,et al. Single-cell analysis of regulatory gene expression in quiescent and activated mouse skeletal muscle satellite cells. , 1997, Developmental biology.
[173] S. Koester,et al. Ectopic Pax-3 Activates MyoD and Myf-5 Expression in Embryonic Mesoderm and Neural Tissue , 1997, Cell.
[174] G. Cossu,et al. Redefining the Genetic Hierarchies Controlling Skeletal Myogenesis: Pax-3 and Myf-5 Act Upstream of MyoD , 1997, Cell.
[175] T. Braun,et al. Regulation and function of SF/HGF during migration of limb muscle precursor cells in chicken. , 1996, Developmental biology.
[176] D. Barritault,et al. Growth factors in skeletal muscle regeneration. , 1996, Cytokine & growth factor reviews.
[177] Y. Jan,et al. Asymmetric Localization of a Mammalian Numb Homolog during Mouse Cortical Neurogenesis , 1996, Neuron.
[178] G. Cossu,et al. How is myogenesis initiated in the embryo? , 1996, Trends in genetics : TIG.
[179] P. Silver,et al. MyoD is required for myogenic stem cell function in adult skeletal muscle. , 1996, Genes & development.
[180] E. Schultz. Satellite cell proliferative compartments in growing skeletal muscles. , 1996, Developmental biology.
[181] S. Di Donna,et al. Activation of different myogenic pathways: myf-5 is induced by the neural tube and MyoD by the dorsal ectoderm in mouse paraxial mesoderm. , 1996, Development.
[182] J. Heino,et al. Satellite cell proliferation and the expression of myogenin and desmin in regenerating skeletal muscle: evidence for two different populations of satellite cells. , 1995, Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology.
[183] B. Schäfer,et al. Molecular cloning and characterization of a human PAX-7 cDNA expressed in normal and neoplastic myocytes. , 1994, Nucleic acids research.
[184] G. Cossu,et al. A population of myogenic cells derived from the mouse neural tube , 1994, Neuron.
[185] M. Goulding,et al. Regulation of Pax-3 expression in the dermomyotome and its role in muscle development. , 1994, Development.
[186] B. Williams,et al. Pax-3 expression in segmental mesoderm marks early stages in myogenic cell specification. , 1994, Development.
[187] M. Grounds,et al. Intrinsic differences in MyoD and myogenin expression between primary cultures of SJL/J and BALB/C skeletal muscle. , 1994, Experimental cell research.
[188] H. Arnold,et al. Pax-3 is required for the development of limb muscles: a possible role for the migration of dermomyotomal muscle progenitor cells. , 1994, Development.
[189] M. Rudnicki,et al. MyoD or Myf-5 is required for the formation of skeletal muscle , 1993, Cell.
[190] I. Nonaka,et al. Myogenin gene disruption results in perinatal lethality because of severe muscle defect , 1993, Nature.
[191] William H. Klein,et al. Muscle deficiency and neonatal death in mice with a targeted mutation in the myogenin gene , 1993, Nature.
[192] Miranda D. Grounds,et al. The role of macrophages in skeletal muscle regeneration with particular reference to chemotaxis. , 1993, Experimental cell research.
[193] J. Rosenblatt,et al. Gamma irradiation prevents compensatory hypertrophy of overloaded mouse extensor digitorum longus muscle. , 1992, Journal of applied physiology.
[194] M. Rudnicki,et al. Targeted inactivation of the muscle regulatory gene Myf-5 results in abnormal rib development and perinatal death , 1992, Cell.
[195] M. Rudnicki,et al. Inactivation of MyoD in mice leads to up-regulation of the myogenic HLH gene Myf-5 and results in apparently normal muscle development , 1992, Cell.
[196] Robert K. Davis,et al. The myoD gene family: nodal point during specification of the muscle cell lineage. , 1991, Science.
[197] P. Howles,et al. Mouse embryonic stem cells express the cardiac myosin heavy chain genes during development in vitro. , 1990, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[198] E. Schultz,et al. Satellite cell behavior during skeletal muscle growth and regeneration. , 1989, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.
[199] J. Faulkner,et al. Muscle transplantation between young and old rats: age of host determines recovery. , 1989, The American journal of physiology.
[200] H. Aoyama,et al. Determination of somite cells: independence of cell differentiation and morphogenesis. , 1988, Development.
[201] W. Stauber,et al. Characterization of muscles injured by forced lengthening. I. Cellular infiltrates. , 1988, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.
[202] R. Bischoff. Proliferation of muscle satellite cells on intact myofibers in culture. , 1986, Developmental biology.
[203] R. Bischoff,et al. A satellite cell mitogen from crushed adult muscle. , 1986, Developmental biology.
[204] M. Denaro,et al. Response of satellite cells and muscle fibers to long-term compensatory hypertrophy. , 1983, Journal of submicroscopic cytology.
[205] D. Watt,et al. Incorporation of donor muscle precursor cells into an area of muscle regeneration in the host mouse , 1982, Journal of the Neurological Sciences.
[206] M. Sheff,et al. Age‐related impeded regeneration of mouse minced anterior tibial muscle , 1982, Muscle & nerve.
[207] T. Partridge,et al. Skeletal muscle: regeneration and transplantation studies. , 1980, British medical bulletin.
[208] E. Schultz,et al. Developmental fate of skeletal muscle satellite cells. , 1979, Science.
[209] E. Schultz,et al. Satellite cells are mitotically quiescent in mature mouse muscle: an EM and radioautographic study. , 1978, The Journal of experimental zoology.
[210] M. Grounds,et al. Evidence of fusion between host and donor myoblasts in skeletal muscle grafts , 1978, Nature.
[211] M. H. Snow. An autoradiographic study of satellite cell differentiation into regenerating myotubes following transplantation of muscles in young rats , 1978, Cell and Tissue Research.
[212] M. H. Snow. Myogenic cell formation in regenerating rat skeletal muscle injured by mincing II. An autoradiographic study , 1977, The Anatomical record.
[213] Richard Bischoff,et al. Regeneration of single skeletal muscle fibers in vitro , 1975, The Anatomical record.
[214] John Cairns,et al. Mutation selection and the natural history of cancer , 1975, Nature.
[215] G. Cooper,et al. An analysis of nuclear numbers in individual muscle fibers during differentiation and growth: a satellite cell-muscle fiber growth unit. , 1975, The Journal of experimental zoology.
[216] C. P. Leblond,et al. Satellite cells as the source of nuclei in muscles of growing rats , 1971, The Anatomical record.
[217] C. P. Leblond,et al. NATURE OF DIVIDING NUCLEI IN SKELETAL MUSCLE OF GROWING RATS , 1970, The Journal of cell biology.
[218] Church Jc. Satellite cells and myogenesis; a study in the fruit-bat web. , 1969 .
[219] M. Reznik. THYMIDINE-3H UPTAKE BY SATELLITE CELLS OF REGENERATING SKELETAL MUSCLE , 1969, The Journal of cell biology.
[220] M. A. Gorycki,et al. Regeneration in skeletal muscle of mouse: some electron-microscope observations. , 1965, The Journal of pathology and bacteriology.
[221] I. Konigsberg. Clonal Analysis of Myogenesis: Its relevance to the general problem of the stability of cell-type in cultured animal cells is discussed , 1963 .
[222] D. Allbrook. An electron microscopic study of regenerating skeletal muscle. , 1962, Journal of anatomy.
[223] A. Mauro. SATELLITE CELL OF SKELETAL MUSCLE FIBERS , 1961, The Journal of biophysical and biochemical cytology.
[224] B. Walker,et al. Radioautographic study of skeletal muscle regeneration , 1960 .
[225] R. Adams,et al. The response of the normal, the denervated and the dystrophic muscle-cell to injury. , 1956, The Journal of pathology and bacteriology.
[226] Rudolf Jaenisch,et al. Analysis of histone 2B-GFP retention reveals slowly cycling hematopoietic stem cells , 2009, Nature Biotechnology.
[227] Barbara Gayraud-Morel,et al. Template DNA-strand co-segregation and asymmetric cell division in skeletal muscle stem cells. , 2009, Methods in molecular biology.
[228] M. Rudnicki,et al. Pax7 activates myogenic genes by recruitment of a histone methyltransferase complex , 2008, Nature Cell Biology.
[229] Catherine M. Verfaillie,et al. Pluripotency of mesenchymal stem cells derived from adult marrow , 2007, Nature.
[230] M. Rudnicki,et al. Cellular and molecular regulation of muscle regeneration. , 2004, Physiological reviews.
[231] G. Ferrari,et al. Failure to correct murine muscular dystrophy. , 2001, Nature.
[232] G. Pavlath,et al. Hepatocyte growth factor affects satellite cell activation and differentiation in regenerating skeletal muscle. , 2000, American journal of physiology. Cell physiology.
[233] Z. Yablonka-Reuveni,et al. Isolation and clonal analysis of satellite cells from chicken pectoralis muscle. , 1987, Developmental biology.
[234] M. Kieny,et al. Origin of satellite cells in avian skeletal muscles. , 1983, Archives d'anatomie microscopique et de morphologie experimentale.
[235] R. Schofield. The relationship between the spleen colony-forming cell and the haemopoietic stem cell. , 1978, Blood cells.
[236] D. Yaffe,et al. Cellular aspects of muscle differentiation in vitro. , 1969, Current topics in developmental biology.
[237] I. Konigsberg. Clonal analysis of myogenesis. , 1963, Science.
[238] W. E. Clark. An experimental study of the regeneration of mammalian striped muscle. , 1946, Journal of anatomy.
[239] Clark We,et al. An experimental study of the regeneration of mammalian striped muscle. , 1946 .
[240] Jennifer A. Lawson,et al. Satellite cells , connective tissue fibroblasts and their interactions are crucial for muscle regeneration , 2022 .
[241] A. Uezumi,et al. Development and Stem Cells Research Article , 2022 .
[242] S. Hughes,et al. Bmc Developmental Biology Myod-and Nerve-dependent Maintenance of Myod Expression in Mature Muscle Fibres Acts through the Drr/prr Element , 2022 .