Muscle development genes: their relevance in neuromuscular disorders
暂无分享,去创建一个
K. Patel | F. Muntoni | C. Sewry | Sue Brown
[1] J. Seidman,et al. A nonsense mutation in MSX1 causes Witkop syndrome. , 2001, American journal of human genetics.
[2] G. Bydder,et al. Neonatal arthrogryposis and absent limb muscles: a muscle developmental gene defect? , 2001, Neuromuscular Disorders.
[3] G. Pavlath,et al. Altered primary myogenesis in NFATC3(-/-) mice leads to decreased muscle size in the adult. , 2001, Developmental biology.
[4] S. Hughes,et al. Muscle development: Reversal of the differentiated state , 2001, Current Biology.
[5] S. Odelberg,et al. Dedifferentiation of Mammalian Myotubes Induced by msx1 , 2000, Cell.
[6] T. Braun,et al. Heterozygous myogenic factor 6 mutation associated with myopathy and severe course of Becker muscular dystrophy , 2000, Neuromuscular Disorders.
[7] C. Birchmeier,et al. Genes that control the development of migrating muscle precursor cells. , 2000, Current opinion in cell biology.
[8] M. Rudnicki,et al. Myotube Formation is Delayed but not Prevented in MyoD-deficient Skeletal Muscle: Studies in Regenerating Whole Muscle Grafts of Adult Mice , 2000, The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society.
[9] M. Rudnicki,et al. Pax7 Is Required for the Specification of Myogenic Satellite Cells , 2000, Cell.
[10] Perry Rl,et al. Molecular mechanisms regulating myogenic determination and differentiation. , 2000 .
[11] B. Wold,et al. MyoD(-/-) satellite cells in single-fiber culture are differentiation defective and MRF4 deficient. , 2000, Developmental biology.
[12] Y. Goto,et al. Expression of MyoD and myogenin in dystrophic mice, mdx and dy, during regeneration , 2000, Acta Neuropathologica.
[13] R. Bassel-Duby,et al. Myogenic stem cell function is impaired in mice lacking the forkhead/winged helix protein MNF. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[14] E. Füchtbauer,et al. Molecular genetics of muscle development andneuromuscular diseases Kloster Irsee, Germany, September 26–October 1, 1999 , 2000 .
[15] John I. Clark,et al. Mice deficient in Six5 develop cataracts: implications for myotonic dystrophy , 2000, Nature Genetics.
[16] K. Arimura,et al. An overexpression of fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and FGF receptor 4 in a severe clinical phenotype of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy , 2000, Muscle & nerve.
[17] F. Muntoni,et al. Velocardiofacial syndrome associated with atrophy of the shoulder girdle muscles and cervicomedullary narrowing. , 2000, European journal of paediatric neurology : EJPN : official journal of the European Paediatric Neurology Society.
[18] M. Rudnicki,et al. The molecular regulation of myogenesis , 2000, Clinical genetics.
[19] F. Relaix,et al. From insect eye to vertebrate muscle: redeployment of a regulatory network. , 1999, Genes & development.
[20] P. Lutz,et al. A de novo heterozygous deletion of 42 base‐pairs in the noggin gene of a fibrodysplasia ossificansprogressiva patient , 1999, Clinical genetics.
[21] E. Olson,et al. MEF2: a transcriptional target for signaling pathways controlling skeletal muscle growth and differentiation. , 1999, Current opinion in cell biology.
[22] L. De Angelis,et al. Skeletal Myogenic Progenitors Originating from Embryonic Dorsal Aorta Coexpress Endothelial and Myogenic Markers and Contribute to Postnatal Muscle Growth and Regeneration , 1999, The Journal of cell biology.
[23] R. Marcucio,et al. Differentiation of avian craniofacial muscles: I. Patterns of early regulatory gene expression and myosin heavy chain synthesis , 1999, Developmental dynamics : an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists.
[24] T. Braun,et al. Early specification of limb muscle precursor cells by the homeobox gene Lbx1h , 1999, Nature Genetics.
[25] Se-Jin Lee,et al. Myostatin and the control of skeletal muscle mass. , 1999, Current opinion in genetics & development.
[26] P. Rigby,et al. Mox2 is a component of the genetic hierarchy controlling limb muscle development , 1999, Nature.
[27] S. Iannaccone,et al. Human bHLH transcription factor gene myogenin (MYOG): genomic sequence and negative mutation analysis in patients with severe congenital myopathies. , 1999, Genomics.
[28] K. Patel,et al. A molecular mechanism enabling continuous embryonic muscle growth - a balance between proliferation and differentiation. , 1999, Development.
[29] S. Arver,et al. Organization of the human myostatin gene and expression in healthy men and HIV-infected men with muscle wasting. , 1998, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[30] K. Patel,et al. The importance of timing differentiation during limb muscle development , 1998, Current Biology.
[31] I. Ferrer,et al. Expression of myogenic regulatory factors (MRFs) in human neuromuscular disorders , 1997, Neuropathology and applied neurobiology.
[32] M. Rudnicki,et al. MyoD and Myf-5 differentially regulate the development of limb versus trunk skeletal muscle. , 1997, Development.
[33] S. Scherer,et al. Mutations in the C-terminal domain of Sonic Hedgehog cause holoprosencephaly. , 1997, Human molecular genetics.
[34] R. Balling,et al. Pax genes and organogenesis , 1997, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.
[35] G. Cossu,et al. Redefining the Genetic Hierarchies Controlling Skeletal Myogenesis: Pax-3 and Myf-5 Act Upstream of MyoD , 1997, Cell.
[36] B. Wold,et al. Skeletal muscle determination and differentiation: story of a core regulatory network and its context. , 1996, Current opinion in cell biology.
[37] A. Simeone,et al. Uncoupling of Grb2 from the Met Receptor In Vivo Reveals Complex Roles in Muscle Development , 1996, Cell.
[38] R. Harland,et al. The Spemann Organizer Signal noggin Binds and Inactivates Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4 , 1996, Cell.
[39] M. Muenke,et al. Overexpression of an osteogenic morphogen in fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva. , 1996, The New England journal of medicine.
[40] J. Seidman,et al. A human MSX1 homeodomain missense mutation causes selective tooth agenesis , 1996, Nature Genetics.
[41] P. Silver,et al. MyoD is required for myogenic stem cell function in adult skeletal muscle. , 1996, Genes & development.
[42] S. Shafiq,et al. In Situ Hybridization Analysis for Expression of Myogenic Regulatory Factors in Regenerating Muscle of mdx Mouse , 1996, Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology.
[43] P. Schnegelsberg,et al. Functional redundancy of the muscle-specific transcription factors Myf5 and myogenin , 1996, Nature.
[44] B. Christ,et al. Early stages of chick somite development , 1995, Anatomy and Embryology.
[45] D. Sassoon,et al. Digit tip regeneration correlates with regions of Msx1 (Hox 7) expression in fetal and newborn mice. , 1995, Development.
[46] A. Bradley,et al. Multiple defects and perinatal death in mice deficient in follistatin , 1995, Nature.
[47] T. Braun,et al. Inactivation of Myf‐6 and Myf‐5 genes in mice leads to alterations in skeletal muscle development. , 1995, The EMBO journal.
[48] M. Tassabehji,et al. PAX3 gene structure and mutations: close analogies between Waardenburg syndrome and the Splotch mouse. , 1994, Human molecular genetics.
[49] Cecil B. Day,et al. Elevated basic fibroblast growth factor in the serum of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy , 1994, Annals of neurology.
[50] William H. Klein,et al. Muscle deficiency and neonatal death in mice with a targeted mutation in the myogenin gene , 1993, Nature.
[51] C. Baldwin,et al. Mutations in the paired domain of the human PAX3 gene cause Klein-Waardenburg syndrome (WS-III) as well as Waardenburg syndrome type I (WS-I). , 1993, American journal of human genetics.
[52] R. Balling,et al. Waardenburg's syndrome patients have mutations in the human homologue of the Pax-3 paired box gene , 1992, Nature.
[53] S. Yamada,et al. Fibroblast growth factor in the extracellular matrix of dystrophic (mdx) mouse muscle. , 1989, Science.
[54] S. Reed,et al. Part I. Amyoplasia: a common, sporadic condition with congenital contractures. , 1983, American journal of medical genetics.
[55] M. Urbanek,et al. Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva, a heritable disorder of severe heterotopic ossification, maps to human chromosome 4q27-31. , 2000, American journal of human genetics.
[56] T. Braun,et al. Genetics of muscle determination and development. , 2000, Current topics in developmental biology.