The chick embryo: a leading model in somitogenesis studies |
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Authors: | Pourquié Olivier |
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Affiliation: | Stowers Institute for Medical Research, 1000E 50th Street, Kansas City, MO 64110, USA. olp@stowers-institute.org |
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Abstract: | The vertebrate body is built on a metameric organization which consists of a repetition of functionally equivalent units, each comprising a vertebra, its associated muscles, peripheral nerves and blood vessels. This periodic pattern is established during embryogenesis by the somitogenesis process. Somites are generated in a rhythmic fashion from the presomitic mesoderm and they subsequently differentiate to give rise to the vertebrae and skeletal muscles of the body. Somitogenesis has been very actively studied in the chick embryo since the 19th century and many of the landmark experiments that led to our current understanding of the vertebrate segmentation process have been performed in this organism. Somite formation involves an oscillator, the segmentation clock whose periodic signal is converted into the periodic array of somite boundaries by a spacing mechanism relying on a traveling threshold of FGF signaling regressing in concert with body axis extension. |
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Keywords: | Somite Presomitic mesoderm FGF Segmentation Clock Notch Retinoic acid |
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