Taken as a composite, the meaning of the composite term ''genetic program''widely taken to suggest an explanation of biological development -simultaneously depends upon and underwrites the particular presumption that a ''plan of procedure'' for development is itself written in the sequence of nucleo
Conserved genetic programs in insect and mammalian brain development
β Scribed by Frank Hirth; Heinrich Reichert
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 143 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0265-9247
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In recent years it has become evident that the developmental regulatory genes involved in patterning the embryonic body plan are conserved throughout the animal kingdom. Striking examples are the orthodenticle (otd/Otx) gene family and the Hox gene family, both of which act in the specification of anteroposterior polarity along the embryonic body axis. Studies carried out in Drosophila and mouse now demonstrate that these genes are also involved in the formation of the insect and mammalian brain; the otd/Otx genes are involved in rostral brain development and the Hox genes are involved in caudal brain development. These studies also show that the genes of the otd/Otx family can functionally replace each other in cross-phylum rescue experiments and indicate that the genetic mechanisms underlying pattern formation in insect and mammalian brain development are evolutionarily conserved.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A mouse gene, designated prtb (proline codon-rich transcript, brain expressed) was identified and characterized from a gene trap embryonic stem cell line. It encodes a prolinerich protein of 168 amino acids that shares 99% amino acid sequence identity with its human homologue and is located on the d