16 TGF-β Family Signaling in Early Postimplantation Development of the Mouse
Abstract
The first sign of overt morphological asymmetry in the embryo begins with the formation of the anterior visceral endoderm, an extraembryonic tissue, at E5.5. The anterior visceral endoderm first appears at the distal tip of the egg cylinder and is defined by molecular markers such as expression of Hex. This distal region of the visceral endoderm starts to move toward the future anterior side at E5.5, and by E5.75–6.0, the distal visceral endodermal cells are located at the future anterior side of the embryo to form the anterior visceral endoderm (Rivera-Perez et al. 2003; Srinivas et al. 2004). Although the formation and anterior movement of the anterior visceral endoderm have long been thought to mark the initiation of anterior–posterior axis formation, recent findings have identified molecular asymmetries along the prospective anterior–posterior axis before the movement of the...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.461-491