Fgf-signaling is compartmentalized within the mesenchyme and controls proliferation during salamander limb development.
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Abstract |
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Although decades of studies have produced a generalized model for tetrapod limb development, urodeles deviate from anurans and amniotes in at least two key respects: their limbs exhibit preaxial skeletal differentiation and do not develop an apical ectodermal ridge (AER). Here, we investigated how () and () signaling regulate limb development in the axolotl. We found that -expressing cells contributed to the most posterior digit, and that inhibiting Shh-signaling inhibited expression, anteroposterior patterning, and distal cell proliferation. In addition to lack of a morphological AER, we found that salamander limbs also lack a molecular AER. We found that amniote and anuran AER-specific and their cognate receptors were expressed entirely in the mesenchyme. Broad inhibition of Fgf-signaling demonstrated that this pathway regulates cell proliferation across all three limb axes, in contrast to anurans and amniotes where Fgf-signaling regulates cell survival and proximodistal patterning. |
Year of Publication |
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2019
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Journal |
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eLife
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Volume |
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8
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Date Published |
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2019
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URL |
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https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.48507
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DOI |
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10.7554/eLife.48507
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Short Title |
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Elife
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