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    Nature. 1995 Jul 27;376(6538):333-6.

    Regulation of neural induction by the Chd and Bmp-4 antagonistic patterning signals in Xenopus.

    Sasai Y, Lu B, Steinbeisser H, De Robertis EM.

    Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Los Angeles 90095-1737, USA.

    Erratum in:

    In Drosophila the amount of neurogenic ectoderm, from which the central nervous system (CNS) derives, is regulated by a dorsal-ventral system of positional information in which two secreted molecules of antagonistic functions, decapentaplegic (dpp) and short-gastrulation (sog), play fundamental roles. The vertebrate homologue of dpp is either bmp-4 or bmp-2 (ref. 5), and the homologue os sog is chd (s-chordin). In Xenopus the CNS is induced by signals emanating from the organizer, and two proteins secreted by the organizer, noggin and follistatin, have been shown to induce neural tissue in animal-cap assays. Here we report that Chd, another organizer-specific secreted factor, has neuralizing activity and that this activity can be antagonized by Bmp-4. Inhibition of the function of the endogenous Bmp-4 present in the animal cap also leads to neural differentiation. We suggest that conserved molecular mechanisms involving chd/sog and bmp-4/dpp gene products pattern the ectoderm in Xenopus and in Drosophila.

    PMID: 7630399 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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