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Brain enlargement with rostral bias in larvae from a spontaneously occurring female variant line of Xenopus; role of aberrant embryonic Wnt/β-catenin signaling. , Hongo I., Cells Dev. April 3, 2024; 203918.
Loss of Xenopus cadherin-11 leads to increased Wnt/ β-catenin signaling and up-regulation of target genes c- myc and cyclin D1 in neural crest. , Koehler A., Dev Biol. November 1, 2013; 383 (1): 132-45.
ATP4a is required for Wnt-dependent Foxj1 expression and leftward flow in Xenopus left- right development. , Walentek P ., Cell Rep. May 31, 2012; 1 (5): 516-27.
The forkhead transcription factor FoxB1 regulates the dorsal- ventral and anterior- posterior patterning of the ectoderm during early Xenopus embryogenesis. , Takebayashi-Suzuki K., Dev Biol. December 1, 2011; 360 (1): 11-29.
Peter Pan functions independently of its role in ribosome biogenesis during early eye and craniofacial cartilage development in Xenopus laevis. , Bugner V., Development. June 1, 2011; 138 (11): 2369-78.
Notch destabilises maternal beta-catenin and restricts dorsal- anterior development in Xenopus. , Acosta H., Development. June 1, 2011; 138 (12): 2567-79.
Interaction of ZFPIP with PBX1 is crucial for proper expression of neural genetic markers during Xenopus development. , Laurent A., Dev Growth Differ. October 1, 2009; 51 (8): 699-706.
PTK7 recruits dsh to regulate neural crest migration. , Shnitsar I., Development. December 1, 2008; 135 (24): 4015-24.
VegT, eFGF and Xbra cause overall posteriorization while Xwnt8 causes eye-level restricted posteriorization in synergy with chordin in early Xenopus development. , Fujii H., Dev Growth Differ. March 1, 2008; 50 (3): 169-80.
Tes regulates neural crest migration and axial elongation in Xenopus. , Dingwell KS., Dev Biol. May 1, 2006; 293 (1): 252-67.
Role of glypican 4 in the regulation of convergent extension movements during gastrulation in Xenopus laevis. , Ohkawara B., Development. May 1, 2003; 130 (10): 2129-38.
foxD5a, a Xenopus winged helix gene, maintains an immature neural ectoderm via transcriptional repression that is dependent on the C-terminal domain. , Sullivan SA., Dev Biol. April 15, 2001; 232 (2): 439-57.
The maternal Xenopus beta-catenin signaling pathway, activated by frizzled homologs, induces goosecoid in a cell non-autonomous manner. , Brown JD., Dev Growth Differ. August 1, 2000; 42 (4): 347-57.