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Recent "developmental" articles

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Awareness of linear and nonlinear morphology in Hebrew: a developmental study
First Language 21 (61), 025 (2001)
 
Influential Mileposts Of A Toddler
www.webarticles.com
Toddler stage is the turning point in a child’s formative years, wherein developmental milestones are mark with fresh and exciting skills and activities.
 
Developmental sex differences in basic visuospatial processing: differences in strategy use?
Amy M Clements-Stephens, Sheryl L Rimrodt, and Laurie E Cutting
Neuroscience letters 449 (3), 155-60 (16 Jan 2009)
 
The transformation of the model organism: a decade of developmental genetics - Nature Genetics
www.nature.com
Posted by sarah90 to developmental genetics on Tue Dec 30 2008 at 17:45 UTC | info | related
 
Developmental abnormalities of the optic nerve and chiasm
D Taylor
Eye 21 (10), 1271-84
 
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=289176&blobtype=pdf
 
bantam encodes a developmentally regulated microRNA that controls cell proliferation and regulates the proapoptotic gene hid in Drosophila.
Julius Brennecke et al.
Cell 113 (1), 25-36 (04 Apr 2003)
Cell proliferation, cell death, and pattern formation are coordinated in animal development. Although many proteins that control cell proliferation and apoptosis have been identified, the means by which these effectors are linked to the patterning machinery remain poorly understood. Here, we report that the bantam gene of Drosophila encodes a 21 nucleotide microRNA that promotes tissue growth. bantam expression is temporally and spatially regulated in response to patterning cues. bantam microRNA simultaneously stimulates cell proliferation and prevents apoptosis. We identify the pro-apoptotic gene hid as a target for regulation by bantam miRNA, providing an explanation for bantam?s anti-apoptotic activity.
 
Oskar protein interaction with Vasa represents an essential step in polar granule assembly.
W Breitwieser et al.
Genes & development 10 (17), 2179-88 (01 Sep 1996)
The posterior pole plasm of the Drosophila egg contains the determinants of abdominal and germ-cell fates of the embryo. Pole plasm assembly is induced by oskar RNA localized to the posterior pole of the oocyte. Genetics has revealed three additional genes, staufen, vasa, and tudor, that are also essential for pole plasm formation. Staufen protein is required for both oskar RNA localization and translation. Vasa and Tudor are localized dependent on Oskar protein and are required to accumulate Oskar protein stably at the posterior pole. We have explored interactions between these gene products at the molecular level and find that Oskar interacts directly with Vasa and Staufen, in a yeast two-hybrid assay. These interactions also occur in vitro and are affected by mutations in Oskar that abolish pole plasm formation in vivo. Finally, we show that in the pole plasm, Oskar protein, like Vasa and Tudor, is a component of polar granules, the germ-line-specific RNP structures. These results suggest that the Oskar-Vasa interaction constitutes an initial step in polar granule assembly. In addition, we discuss the possible biological role of the Oskar-Staufen interaction.
 
Role for mRNA localization in translational activation but not spatial restriction of nanos RNA.
S E Bergsten and E R Gavis
Development (Cambridge, England) 126 (4), 659-69 (Feb 1999)
Patterning of the anterior-posterior body axis during Drosophila development depends on the restriction of Nanos protein to the posterior of the early embryo. Synthesis of Nanos occurs only when maternally provided nanos RNA is localized to the posterior pole by a large, cis-acting signal in the nanos 3? untranslated region (3?UTR); translation of unlocalized nanos RNA is repressed by a 90 nucleotide Translational Control Element (TCE), also in the 3?UTR. We now show quantitatively that the majority of nanos RNA in the embryo is not localized to the posterior pole but is distributed throughout the cytoplasm, indicating that translational repression is the primary mechanism for restricting production of Nanos protein to the posterior. Through an analysis of transgenes bearing multiple copies of nanos 3?UTR regulatory sequences, we provide evidence that localization of nanos RNA by components of the posteriorly localized germ plasm activates its translation by preventing interaction of nanos RNA with translational repressors. This mutually exclusive relationship between translational repression and RNA localization is mediated by a 180 nucleotide region of the nanos localization signal, containing the TCE. These studies suggest that the ability of RNA localization to direct wild-type body patterning also requires recognition of multiple, unique elements within the nanos localization signal by novel factors. Finally, we propose that differences in the efficiencies with which different RNAs are localized result from the use of temporally distinct localization pathways during oogenesis.
 
The msl-2 dosage compensation gene of Drosophila encodes a putative DNA-binding protein whose expression is sex specifically regulated by Sex-lethal.
G J Bashaw and B S Baker
Development (Cambridge, England) 121 (10), 3245-58 (Oct 1995)
In Drosophila dosage compensation increases the rate of transcription of the male?s X chromosome and depends on four autosomal male-specific lethal genes. We have cloned the msl-2 gene and shown that MSL-2 protein is co-localized with the other three MSL proteins at hundreds of sites along the male polytene X chromosome and that this binding requires the other three MSL proteins. msl-2 encodes a protein with a putative DNA-binding domain: the RING finger. MSL-2 protein is not produced in females and sequences in both the 5? and 3? UTRs are important for this sex-specific regulation. Furthermore, msl-2 pre-mRNA is alternatively spliced in a Sex-lethal-dependent fashion in its 5? UTR.

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