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      Syndactyly genes and classification: a mini review

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      Journal of Biochemical and Clinical Genetics
      Discover STM Publishing Ltd.

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          Most cited references55

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          Evolution of the Fgf and Fgfr gene families.

          Fibroblast growth factors (Fgfs) and Fgf receptors (Fgfrs) comprise a signaling system that is conserved throughout metazoan evolution. Twenty-two Fgfs and four Fgfrs have been identified in humans and mice. During evolution, the Fgf family appears to have expanded in two phases. In the first phase, during early metazoan evolution, Fgfs expanded from two or three to six genes by gene duplication. In the second phase, during the evolution of early vertebrates, the Fgf family expanded by two large-scale gen(om)e duplications. By contrast, the Fgfr family has expanded only in the second phase. However, the acquisition of alternative splicing by Fgfrs has increased their functional diversity. The mechanisms that regulate alternative splicing have been conserved since the divergences of echinoderms and vertebrates. The expansion of the Fgf and Fgfr gene families has enabled this signaling system to acquire functional diversity and, therefore, an almost ubiquitous involvement in developmental and physiological processes.
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            Ciliopathies.

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              Cyclopia and defective axial patterning in mice lacking Sonic hedgehog gene function.

              Targeted gene disruption in the mouse shows that the Sonic hedgehog (Shh) gene plays a critical role in patterning of vertebrate embryonic tissues, including the brain and spinal cord, the axial skeleton and the limbs. Early defects are observed in the establishment or maintenance of midline structures, such as the notochord and the floorplate, and later defects include absence of distal limb structures, cyclopia, absence of ventral cell types within the neural tube, and absence of the spinal column and most of the ribs. Defects in all tissues extend beyond the normal sites of Shh transcription, confirming the proposed role of Shh proteins as an extracellular signal required for the tissue-organizing properties of several vertebrate patterning centres.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Biochemical and Clinical Genetics
                JBCGenetics
                Discover STM Publishing Ltd.
                1658-807X
                2018
                2018
                : 10-18
                Article
                10.24911/JBCGenetics/183-1532177257
                897b6ce1-603d-49f0-bae2-56acd2623d2d
                © 2018

                http://www.scopemed.org/?page=license

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