A tale of two cities: The genetic mechanisms governing calvarial bone development

Genesis : the Journal of Genetics and Development
James W Ferguson, Radhika P Atit

Abstract

The skull bones must grow in a coordinated, three-dimensional manner to coalesce and form the head and face. Mammalian skull bones have a dual embryonic origin from cranial neural crest cells (CNCC) and paraxial mesoderm (PM) and ossify through intramembranous ossification. The calvarial bones, the bones of the cranium which cover the brain, are derived from the supraorbital arch (SOA) region mesenchyme. The SOA is the site of frontal and parietal bone morphogenesis and primary center of ossification. The objective of this review is to frame our current in vivo understanding of the morphogenesis of the calvarial bones and the gene networks regulating calvarial bone initiation in the SOA mesenchyme.

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Citations

Mar 3, 2020·Dental Materials Journal·Hiroko OkawaIchiro Nishimura
Aug 28, 2020·Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology·Eva SvandovaHerve Lesot
Nov 13, 2020·Journal of Bone and Mineral Research : the Official Journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research·Gretl HendrickxThorsten Schinke
Dec 15, 2020·Developmental Dynamics : an Official Publication of the American Association of Anatomists·Gabriel L GaleaPhilippa Francis-West
Apr 30, 2021·Developmental Dynamics : an Official Publication of the American Association of Anatomists·Alyssa EnnyTetsuya Nakamura
Jul 3, 2021·Journal of Developmental Biology·Beatriz A IbarraRadhika P Atit
Aug 12, 2021·Nature Communications·D'Juan T FarmerStephen R F Twigg

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