Porcine skin-derived stem cells can serve as donor cells for nuclear transfer.
暂无分享,去创建一个
L. Spate | C. Murphy | R. Prather | P. Dyce | Julang Li | J. Ross | Y. Hao | D. Wax | A. Rieke | M. Samuel | P. Sutovsky | Zhisheng Zhong
[1] L. Magnani,et al. Developmental capacity of porcine nuclear transfer embryos correlate with levels of chromatin‐remodeling transcripts in donor cells , 2008, Molecular reproduction and development.
[2] L. Spate,et al. Osteopontin improves in vitro development of porcine embryos and decreases apoptosis , 2008, Molecular reproduction and development.
[3] R. Prather,et al. Genetically Modified Pigs for Medicine and Agriculture , 2008, Biotechnology & genetic engineering reviews.
[4] Teoan Kim,et al. Serial cloning of pigs by somatic cell nuclear transfer: Restoration of phenotypic normality during serial cloning , 2007, Developmental dynamics : an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists.
[5] R. Prather. Targeted genetic modification: xenotransplantation and beyond. , 2007, Cloning and stem cells.
[6] S. Stice,et al. Isolation, Characterization, Gene Modification, and Nuclear Reprogramming of Porcine Mesenchymal Stem Cells1 , 2006, Biology of reproduction.
[7] M. Kurome,et al. Production of cloned pigs by nuclear transfer of preadipocytes established from adult mature adipocytes. , 2005, Cloning and stem cells.
[8] P. Dyce,et al. Embryos Derived from Porcine Skin-Derived Stem Cells Exhibit Enhanced Preimplantation Development1 , 2004, Biology of reproduction.
[9] R. Prather,et al. In vitro development of preimplantation porcine nuclear transfer embryos cultured in different media and gas atmospheres. , 2004, Theriogenology.
[10] P. Dyce,et al. Stem cells with multilineage potential derived from porcine skin. , 2004, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[11] P. Sutovsky. Visualization of sperm accessory structures in the mammalian spermatids, spermatozoa, and zygotes by immunofluorescence, confocal, and immunoelectron microscopy. , 2004, Methods in molecular biology.
[12] B. Davis,et al. Glass Needle-Mediated Microinjection of Macromolecules and Transgenes into Primary Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells , 2003, Journal of Biomedical Science.
[13] Kwang-Wook Park,et al. Transgenic pig expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein produced by nuclear transfer using colchicine‐treated fibroblasts as donor cells , 2002, Molecular reproduction and development.
[14] B. N. Day,et al. Production of α-1,3-Galactosyltransferase Knockout Pigs by Nuclear Transfer Cloning , 2002, Science.
[15] Kwang-Wook Park,et al. PRODUCTION OF NUCLEAR TRANSFER-DERIVED SWINE THAT EXPRESS THE ENHANCED GREEN FLUORESCENT PROTEIN , 2001, Animal biotechnology.
[16] R. Jaenisch,et al. Hybrid vigor, fetal overgrowth, and viability of mice derived by nuclear cloning and tetraploid embryo complementation , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[17] R. Jaenisch,et al. Generation of mice from wild-type and targeted ES cells by nuclear cloning , 2000, Nature Genetics.
[18] R Yanagimachi,et al. Mice cloned from embryonic stem cells. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[19] R. Prather,et al. Nuclear transplantation in early pig embryos. , 1989, Biology of reproduction.