TY - JOUR
T1 - Xbap, a vertebrate gene related to bagpipe, is expressed in developing craniofacial structures and in anterior gut muscle
AU - Newman, Craig S.
AU - Grow, Matthew W.
AU - Cleaver, Ondine
AU - Chia, Frank
AU - Krieg, Paul
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Dan Suefert for advice and insight and for comments on the manuscript. We thank Klaus Kalthoff and Peter Vize for critical reading of the manuscript. We are especially grateful to Nicola Civill and Tim Mohun for communicating the sequence of an independently isolated full-length Xbap eDNA clone prior to publication. This work was supported by NIH Grants HD25179 and HL52746 to P.A.K.
PY - 1997/1/15
Y1 - 1997/1/15
N2 - The Drosophila bagpipe (bap) gene is involved in the specification of the musculature of the embryonic midgut. We report the isolation and characterization of a Xenopus sequence, Xbap, which is closely related to bap. Xbap is also expressed in the developing musculature of the midgut, suggesting that this developmental role of bagpipe is evolutionarily conserved. However, a second, novel role in development is suggested by the observation that Xbap is also expressed in a region of the developing facial cartilage. Using a combination of cartilage staining and comparison to the goosecoid head expression pattern, we show that Xbap expression marks the precursors to the basihyobranchial, palatoquadrate, and possibly Meckel's cartilages. This vertebrate bagpipe sequence therefore is expressed in both mesodermally and neural crest-derived tissues.
AB - The Drosophila bagpipe (bap) gene is involved in the specification of the musculature of the embryonic midgut. We report the isolation and characterization of a Xenopus sequence, Xbap, which is closely related to bap. Xbap is also expressed in the developing musculature of the midgut, suggesting that this developmental role of bagpipe is evolutionarily conserved. However, a second, novel role in development is suggested by the observation that Xbap is also expressed in a region of the developing facial cartilage. Using a combination of cartilage staining and comparison to the goosecoid head expression pattern, we show that Xbap expression marks the precursors to the basihyobranchial, palatoquadrate, and possibly Meckel's cartilages. This vertebrate bagpipe sequence therefore is expressed in both mesodermally and neural crest-derived tissues.
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U2 - 10.1006/dbio.1996.8416
DO - 10.1006/dbio.1996.8416
M3 - Article
C2 - 9013932
AN - SCOPUS:0031568312
SN - 0012-1606
VL - 181
SP - 223
EP - 233
JO - Developmental biology
JF - Developmental biology
IS - 2
ER -