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Publication : Recent advances in primary palate and midface morphogenesis research.

First Author  Diewert VM Year  1992
Journal  Crit Rev Oral Biol Med Volume  4
Issue  1 Pages  111-30
PubMed ID  1457684 Mgi Jnum  J:14149
Mgi Id  MGI:62323 Doi  10.1177/10454411920040010201
Citation  Diewert VM, et al. (1992) Recent advances in primary palate and midface morphogenesis research. Crit Rev Oral Biol Med 4(1):111-30
abstractText  During the sixth week of human development, the primary palate develops as facial prominences enlarge around the nasal pits to form the premaxillary region. Growth of craniofacial components changes facial morphology and affects the extent of contact between the facial prominences. Our recent studies have focused on developing methods to analyze growth of the primary palate and the craniofacial complex to define morphological phases of normal development and to determine alterations leading to cleft lip malformation. Analysis of human embryos in the Carnegie Embryology Collection and mouse embryos of cleft lip and noncleft strains showed that human and mouse embryos have similar phases of primary palate development: first, an epithelial seam, the nasal fin, forms; then a mesenchymal bridge develops through the nasal fin and enlarges rapidly. A robust mesenchymal bridge must form between the facial prominences before advancing midfacial growth patterns tend to separate the facial components as the medial nasal region narrows and elongates, the nasal pits narrow, and the primary choanae (posterior nares) open posterior to the primary palate. In mouse strains with cleft lip gene, maxillary growth, nasal fin formation, and mesenchymal replacement of the nasal fin were all delayed compared with noncleft strains of mice. Successful primary palate formation involves a sequence of local cellular events that are closely timed with spatial changes associated with craniofacial growth that must occur within a critical developmental period.
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