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Merck
  • Silencing of an abdominal Hox gene during early development is correlated with limb development in a crustacean trunk.

Silencing of an abdominal Hox gene during early development is correlated with limb development in a crustacean trunk.

Evolution & development (2010-05-04)
Cheryl C Hsia, Adam C Paré, Michael Hannon, Matthew Ronshaugen, William McGinnis
ABSTRACT

We tested whether Artemia abd-A could repress limbs in Drosophila embryos, and found that although abd-A transcripts were produced, ABD-A protein was not. Similarly, developing Artemia epidermal cells showed expression of abd-A transcripts without accumulation of ABD-A protein. This finding in Artemia reveals a new variation in Hox gene function that is associated with morphological evolution. In this case, a HOX protein expression pattern is completely absent during early development, although the HOX protein is expressed at later stages in the central nervous system in a "homeotic-like" pattern. The combination of an absence of ABD-A protein expression in the Artemia limb primordia and the weak repressive function of Artemia UBX protein on the limb-promoting gene Dll are likely to be two reasons why homonomous limbs develop throughout the entire Artemia trunk.

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Roche
Mix di marcatura dell′RNA con DIG, sufficient for 20 reactions, solution
Roche
Anti-Digoxigenin, from sheep