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Volume 17, Issue 10:  May 15, 2003  [Index by Author]  [Cover Caption] 

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Other Issues:
  Reviews
  Research Communications
  Research Papers
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To see an article, click its [Full Text] link. To review many abstracts, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want, and click the 'Get All Checked Abstract(s)' button. To see one abstract at a time, click its [Abstract] link.

Reviews:

Laura Alonso and Elaine Fuchs
Stem cells in the skin: waste not, Wnt not
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1189-1200. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Research Communications:

Yutaka Yoshida, Takahisa Nakamura, Masato Komoda, Hitoshi Satoh, Toru Suzuki, Junko K. Tsuzuku, Takashi Miyasaka, Eri H. Yoshida, Hisashi Umemori, Reiko K. Kunisaki, Kenzaburo Tani, Shunsuke Ishii, Shigeo Mori, Masami Suganuma, Tetsuo Noda, and Tadashi Yamamoto
Mice lacking a transcriptional corepressor Tob are predisposed to cancer
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1201-1206. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] Supplemental Research Data  

Luke T. Krebs, Naomi Iwai, Shigenori Nonaka, Ian C. Welsh, Yu Lan, Rulang Jiang, Yukio Saijoh, Timothy P. O'Brien, Hiroshi Hamada, and Thomas Gridley
Notch signaling regulates left-right asymmetry determination by inducing Nodal expression
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1207-1212. Published in Advance May 2, 2003, 10.1101/gad.1084703 [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] Supplemental Research Data  

Ángel Raya, Yasuhiko Kawakami, Concepción Rodríguez-Esteban, Dirk Büscher, Christopher M. Koth, Tohru Itoh, Masanobu Morita, R. Marina Raya, Ilir Dubova, Joaquín Grego Bessa, José Luis de la Pompa, and Juan Carlos Izpisúa Belmonte
Notch activity induces Nodal expression and mediates the establishment of left-right asymmetry in vertebrate embryos
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1213-1218. Published in Advance May 2, 2003, 10.1101/gad.1084403 [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

David Van Mater, Frank T. Kolligs, Andrzej A. Dlugosz, and Eric R. Fearon
Transient activation of beta -catenin signaling in cutaneous keratinocytes is sufficient to trigger the active growth phase of the hair cycle in mice
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1219-1224. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Research Papers:

Dayalan G. Srinivasan, Ridgely M. Fisk, Huihong Xu, and Sander van den Heuvel
A complex of LIN-5 and GPR proteins regulates G protein signaling and spindle function in C. elegans
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1225-1239. Published in Advance May 2, 2003, 10.1101/gad.1081203 [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] Supplemental Research Data  

Alan Jian Zhu, Limin Zheng, Kaye Suyama, and Matthew P. Scott
Altered localization of Drosophila Smoothened protein activates Hedgehog signal transduction
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1240-1252. Published in Advance May 2, 2003, 10.1101/gad.1080803 [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] Supplemental Research Data  

Gabriela Dontu, Wissam M. Abdallah, Jessica M. Foley, Kyle W. Jackson, Michael F. Clarke, Mari J. Kawamura, and Max S. Wicha
In vitro propagation and transcriptional profiling of human mammary stem/progenitor cells
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1253-1270. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] Supplemental Research Data  

Claire R. Weston, Anthony Wong, J. Perry Hall, Mary E.P. Goad, Richard A. Flavell, and Roger J. Davis
JNK initiates a cytokine cascade that causes Pax2 expression and closure of the optic fissure
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1271-1280. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Thomas J. Santangelo, Rachel Anne Mooney, Robert Landick, and Jeffrey W. Roberts
RNA polymerase mutations that impair conversion to a termination-resistant complex by Q antiterminator proteins
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1281-1292. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Wilma Ross, David A. Schneider, Brian J. Paul, Aaron Mertens, and Richard L. Gourse
An intersubunit contact stimulating transcription initiation by E. coli RNA polymerase: interaction of the alpha C-terminal domain and sigma region 4
Genes Dev. 2003 17: 1293-1307. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  

To see an article, click its [Full Text] link. To review many abstracts, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want, and click the 'Get All Checked Abstract(s)' button. To see one abstract at a time, click its [Abstract] link.


Cover Caption:

Cover

Drosophila salivary gland cells, which are several hundred times bigger than embryonic and imaginal disc cells, are capable of responding to Hedgehog signaling. Shown here are early third instar larval salivary gland cells taken from transgenic flies producing GFP-tagged Smoothened (GFP-Smo) and Hedgehog (Hh). Without added Hh, low amounts of GFP-Smo are located in a network of intracellular structures (not shown). In salivary gland cells where an active form of Hh signal (HhN) is produced, GFP-Smo (green) undergoes a dramatic translocation to the cell surface. 7AAD (red) is used as a nuclear marker. (For details, see Zhu et al., p. 1240.)



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