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Summary Anatomy Item Literature (955) Expression Attributions Wiki
XB-ANAT-3351

Papers associated with thalamus (and nodal3.2)

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Direct regulation of siamois by VegT is required for axis formation in Xenopus embryo., Li HY., Int J Dev Biol. January 1, 2015; 59 (10-12): 443-51.                          


Custos controls β-catenin to regulate head development during vertebrate embryogenesis., Komiya Y., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. September 9, 2014; 111 (36): 13099-104.                                


Maternal Dead-End1 is required for vegetal cortical microtubule assembly during Xenopus axis specification., Mei W., Development. June 1, 2013; 140 (11): 2334-44.                          


The dual regulator Sufu integrates Hedgehog and Wnt signals in the early Xenopus embryo., Min TH., Dev Biol. October 1, 2011; 358 (1): 262-76.                            


Wnt/beta-catenin signaling is involved in the induction and maintenance of primitive hematopoiesis in the vertebrate embryo., Tran HT., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. September 14, 2010; 107 (37): 16160-5.                                                


XPACE4 is a localized pro-protein convertase required for mesoderm induction and the cleavage of specific TGFbeta proteins in Xenopus development., Birsoy B., Development. February 1, 2005; 132 (3): 591-602.                      


Neural induction in Xenopus: requirement for ectodermal and endomesodermal signals via Chordin, Noggin, beta-Catenin, and Cerberus., Kuroda H., PLoS Biol. May 1, 2004; 2 (5): E92.                


Neural induction in the absence of mesoderm: beta-catenin-dependent expression of secreted BMP antagonists at the blastula stage in Xenopus., Wessely O., Dev Biol. June 1, 2001; 234 (1): 161-73.              


The Xenopus Emx genes identify presumptive dorsal telencephalon and are induced by head organizer signals., Pannese M., Mech Dev. April 1, 1998; 73 (1): 73-83.                

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