Click here to close Hello! We notice that you are using Internet Explorer, which is not supported by Xenbase and may cause the site to display incorrectly. We suggest using a current version of Chrome, FireFox, or Safari.

Summary Anatomy Item Literature (1722) Expression Attributions Wiki
XB-ANAT-106

Papers associated with tail bud (and hoxb9)

Limit to papers also referencing gene:
Show all tail bud papers
???pagination.result.count???

???pagination.result.page??? 1 2 ???pagination.result.next???

Sort Newest To Oldest Sort Oldest To Newest

The Xenopus XIHbox 6 homeo protein, a marker of posterior neural induction, is expressed in proliferating neurons., Wright CV., Development. May 1, 1990; 109 (1): 225-34.                


Retinoic acid can mimic endogenous signals involved in transformation of the Xenopus nervous system., Sharpe CR., Neuron. August 1, 1991; 7 (2): 239-47.


Characterization of the Xenopus Hox 2.4 gene and identification of control elements in its intron., Bittner D., Dev Dyn. January 1, 1993; 196 (1): 11-24.            


Overexpression of a cellular retinoic acid binding protein (xCRABP) causes anteroposterior defects in developing Xenopus embryos., Dekker EJ., Development. April 1, 1994; 120 (4): 973-85.                


Expression patterns of Hoxb genes in the Xenopus embryo suggest roles in anteroposterior specification of the hindbrain and in dorsoventral patterning of the mesoderm., Godsave S., Dev Biol. December 1, 1994; 166 (2): 465-76.              


Fibroblast growth factor is a direct neural inducer, which combined with noggin generates anterior-posterior neural pattern., Lamb TM., Development. November 1, 1995; 121 (11): 3627-36.          


Caudalization of neural fate by tissue recombination and bFGF., Cox WG., Development. December 1, 1995; 121 (12): 4349-58.                


Disruption of BMP signals in embryonic Xenopus ectoderm leads to direct neural induction., Hawley SH., Genes Dev. December 1, 1995; 9 (23): 2923-35.                


eFGF, Xcad3 and Hox genes form a molecular pathway that establishes the anteroposterior axis in Xenopus., Pownall ME., Development. December 1, 1996; 122 (12): 3881-92.                  


A vegetally localized T-box transcription factor in Xenopus eggs specifies mesoderm and endoderm and is essential for embryonic mesoderm formation., Horb ME., Development. May 1, 1997; 124 (9): 1689-98.                    


XBMPRII, a novel Xenopus type II receptor mediating BMP signaling in embryonic tissues., Frisch A., Development. February 1, 1998; 125 (3): 431-42.                  


Two phases of Hox gene regulation during early Xenopus development., Pownall ME., Curr Biol. May 21, 1998; 8 (11): 673-6.              


Xenopus Smad7 inhibits both the activin and BMP pathways and acts as a neural inducer., Casellas R., Dev Biol. June 1, 1998; 198 (1): 1-12.                


Opl: a zinc finger protein that regulates neural determination and patterning in Xenopus., Kuo JS., Development. August 1, 1998; 125 (15): 2867-82.                  


A Meis family protein caudalizes neural cell fates in Xenopus., Salzberg A., Mech Dev. January 1, 1999; 80 (1): 3-13.          


FGF is required for posterior neural patterning but not for neural induction., Holowacz T., Dev Biol. January 15, 1999; 205 (2): 296-308.                


derrière: a TGF-beta family member required for posterior development in Xenopus., Sun BI., Development. April 1, 1999; 126 (7): 1467-82.                    


Post-transcriptional regulation of Xwnt-8 expression is required for normal myogenesis during vertebrate embryonic development., Tian Q., Development. August 1, 1999; 126 (15): 3371-80.                  


Xenopus embryonic E2F is required for the formation of ventral and posterior cell fates during early embryogenesis., Suzuki A., Mol Cell. February 1, 2000; 5 (2): 217-29.                      


Transient depletion of xDnmt1 leads to premature gene activation in Xenopus embryos., Stancheva I., Genes Dev. February 1, 2000; 14 (3): 313-27.                    


Different activities of the frizzled-related proteins frzb2 and sizzled2 during Xenopus anteroposterior patterning., Bradley L., Dev Biol. November 1, 2000; 227 (1): 118-32.                    


The orphan receptor ALK7 and the Activin receptor ALK4 mediate signaling by Nodal proteins during vertebrate development., Reissmann E., Genes Dev. August 1, 2001; 15 (15): 2010-22.                


Siamois functions in the early blastula to induce Spemann's organiser., Kodjabachian L., Mech Dev. October 1, 2001; 108 (1-2): 71-9.          


Expression cloning of Xenopus Os4, an evolutionarily conserved gene, which induces mesoderm and dorsal axis., Zohn IE., Dev Biol. November 1, 2001; 239 (1): 118-31.                    


Cloning and developmental expression of Baf57 in Xenopus laevis., Domingos PM., Mech Dev. August 1, 2002; 116 (1-2): 177-81.    


The latent-TGFbeta-binding-protein-1 (LTBP-1) is expressed in the organizer and regulates nodal and activin signaling., Altmann CR., Dev Biol. August 1, 2002; 248 (1): 118-27.                  


Isolation and growth factor inducibility of the Xenopus laevis Lmx1b gene., Haldin CE., Int J Dev Biol. May 1, 2003; 47 (4): 253-62.            


Flamingo, a cadherin-type receptor involved in the Drosophila planar polarity pathway, can block signaling via the canonical wnt pathway in Xenopus laevis., Morgan R., Int J Dev Biol. May 1, 2003; 47 (4): 245-52.              


Yin Yang 1, a vertebrate polycomb group gene, regulates antero-posterior neural patterning., Kwon HJ., Biochem Biophys Res Commun. July 11, 2003; 306 (4): 1008-13.        


Evidence for antagonism of BMP-4 signals by MAP kinase during Xenopus axis determination and neural specification., Sater AK., Differentiation. September 1, 2003; 71 (7): 434-44.                


Wise, a context-dependent activator and inhibitor of Wnt signalling., Itasaki N., Development. September 1, 2003; 130 (18): 4295-305.                


Twisted gastrulation loss-of-function analyses support its role as a BMP inhibitor during early Xenopus embryogenesis., Blitz IL., Development. October 1, 2003; 130 (20): 4975-88.              


Glypican 4 modulates FGF signalling and regulates dorsoventral forebrain patterning in Xenopus embryos., Galli A., Development. October 1, 2003; 130 (20): 4919-29.              


Morphogenetic movements underlying eye field formation require interactions between the FGF and ephrinB1 signaling pathways., Moore KB., Dev Cell. January 1, 2004; 6 (1): 55-67.                


FLASH, a component of the FAS-CAPSASE8 apoptotic pathway, is directly regulated by Hoxb4 in the notochord., Morgan R., Dev Biol. January 1, 2004; 265 (1): 105-12.              


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.                


Cloning and characterisation of the immunophilin X-CypA in Xenopus laevis., Massé K., Gene Expr Patterns. November 1, 2004; 5 (1): 51-60.      


Conserved cross-interactions in Drosophila and Xenopus between Ras/MAPK signaling and the dual-specificity phosphatase MKP3., Gómez AR., Dev Dyn. March 1, 2005; 232 (3): 695-708.            


Knockdown of the complete Hox paralogous group 1 leads to dramatic hindbrain and neural crest defects., McNulty CL., Development. June 1, 2005; 132 (12): 2861-71.                    


Depletion of Bmp2, Bmp4, Bmp7 and Spemann organizer signals induces massive brain formation in Xenopus embryos., Reversade B., Development. August 1, 2005; 132 (15): 3381-92.            


Maternal Xenopus Zic2 negatively regulates Nodal-related gene expression during anteroposterior patterning., Houston DW., Development. November 1, 2005; 132 (21): 4845-55.              


Twisted gastrulation is required for forebrain specification and cooperates with Chordin to inhibit BMP signaling during X. tropicalis gastrulation., Wills A., Dev Biol. January 1, 2006; 289 (1): 166-78.                                  


Interaction between X-Delta-2 and Hox genes regulates segmentation and patterning of the anteroposterior axis., Peres JN., Mech Dev. April 1, 2006; 123 (4): 321-33.                          


FGF8 spliceforms mediate early mesoderm and posterior neural tissue formation in Xenopus., Fletcher RB., Development. May 1, 2006; 133 (9): 1703-14.            


Novel gene ashwin functions in Xenopus cell survival and anteroposterior patterning., Patil SS., Dev Dyn. July 1, 2006; 235 (7): 1895-907.                            


Xenopus Teashirt1 regulates posterior identity in brain and cranial neural crest., Koebernick K., Dev Biol. October 1, 2006; 298 (1): 312-26.                              


The opposing homeobox genes Goosecoid and Vent1/2 self-regulate Xenopus patterning., Sander V., EMBO J. June 20, 2007; 26 (12): 2955-65.              


Hairy2-Id3 interactions play an essential role in Xenopus neural crest progenitor specification., Nichane M., Dev Biol. October 15, 2008; 322 (2): 355-67.                          


Overlapping functions of Cdx1, Cdx2, and Cdx4 in the development of the amphibian Xenopus tropicalis., Faas L., Dev Dyn. April 1, 2009; 238 (4): 835-52.                                


Dazap2 is required for FGF-mediated posterior neural patterning, independent of Wnt and Cdx function., Roche DD., Dev Biol. September 1, 2009; 333 (1): 26-36.                              

???pagination.result.page??? 1 2 ???pagination.result.next???