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  1. hedgehog and wing development in Drosophila: a morphogen at work?Michel Vervoort - 2000 - Bioessays 22 (5):460-468.
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  • Stripe formation in the early fly embryo: principles, models, and networks.Dmitri Papatsenko - 2009 - Bioessays 31 (11):1172-1180.
    Early development of animal embryos begins from spatially distributed products of gene expression, i.e., gradients. While maternal and early zygotic genes form broad and/or terminal gradients, their direct targets appear later on as relatively narrow stripes, which foreshadow presumptive germ layers or future segments. Evidently, stripe expression of the zygotic genes is among the key mechanisms of embryo patterning. In this paper, known qualitative and quantitative models for the stripe formation are considered on the example of early embryogenesis of Drosophila. (...)
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  • Uncoupling growth from the cell cycle.Laura A. Johnston - 1998 - Bioessays 20 (4):283-286.
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  • On the dynamic nature of positional information.Johannes Jaeger & John Reinitz - 2006 - Bioessays 28 (11):1102-1111.
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  • New growth factors for imaginal discs.David R. Hipfner & Stephen M. Cohen - 1999 - Bioessays 21 (9):718-720.
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  • “Alien” wasps and evolution of development.Miodrag Grbić - 2000 - Bioessays 22 (10):920-932.
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  • Patterned cell determination in a plant tissue: The secondary phloem of trees.Peter Barlow - 2005 - Bioessays 27 (5):533-541.
    The secondary vascular tissues (xylem and phloem) of woody plants originate from a vascular cambium and develop as radially oriented files of cells. The secondary phloem is composed of three or four cell types, which are organised into characteristic recurrent cellular sequences within the radial cell files of this tissue. There is a gradient of auxin (indole acetic acid) across both the cambium and the immediately postmitotic cells within the xylem and phloem domains, and it is believed that this morphogen, (...)
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