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Publication : Control of segment number in vertebrate embryos.

First Author  Gomez C Year  2008
Journal  Nature Volume  454
Issue  7202 Pages  335-9
PubMed ID  18563087 Mgi Jnum  J:137643
Mgi Id  MGI:3801384 Doi  10.1038/nature07020
Citation  Gomez C, et al. (2008) Control of segment number in vertebrate embryos. Nature 454(7202):335-9
abstractText  The vertebrate body axis is subdivided into repeated segments, best exemplified by the vertebrae that derive from embryonic somites. The number of somites is precisely defined for any given species but varies widely from one species to another. To determine the mechanism controlling somite number, we have compared somitogenesis in zebrafish, chicken, mouse and corn snake embryos. Here we present evidence that in all of these species a similar 'clock-and-wavefront' mechanism operates to control somitogenesis; in all of them, somitogenesis is brought to an end through a process in which the presomitic mesoderm, having first increased in size, gradually shrinks until it is exhausted, terminating somite formation. In snake embryos, however, the segmentation clock rate is much faster relative to developmental rate than in other amniotes, leading to a greatly increased number of smaller-sized somites.
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