Endothelial cell transitions in zebrafish vascular development

IF 1.7 4区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY
Li-Kun Phng, Benjamin M. Hogan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In recent decades, developmental biologists have come to view vascular development as a series of progressive transitions. Mesoderm differentiates into endothelial cells; arteries, veins and lymphatic endothelial cells are specified from early endothelial cells; and vascular networks diversify and invade developing tissues and organs. Our understanding of this elaborate developmental process has benefitted from detailed studies using the zebrafish as a model system. Here, we review a number of key developmental transitions that occur in zebrafish during the formation of the blood and lymphatic vessel networks.

Abstract Image

斑马鱼血管发育过程中的内皮细胞转换
近几十年来,发育生物学家开始将血管发育视为一系列渐进的转变。中胚层分化为内皮细胞;动脉、静脉和淋巴管内皮细胞由早期内皮细胞分化而来;血管网络多样化并侵入发育中的组织和器官。我们对这一复杂发育过程的了解得益于以斑马鱼为模型系统的详细研究。在此,我们回顾了斑马鱼在血液和淋巴管网形成过程中发生的一些关键发育转变。
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来源期刊
Development Growth & Differentiation
Development Growth & Differentiation 生物-发育生物学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
62
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Development Growth & Differentiation (DGD) publishes three types of articles: original, resource, and review papers. Original papers are on any subjects having a context in development, growth, and differentiation processes in animals, plants, and microorganisms, dealing with molecular, genetic, cellular and organismal phenomena including metamorphosis and regeneration, while using experimental, theoretical, and bioinformatic approaches. Papers on other related fields are also welcome, such as stem cell biology, genomics, neuroscience, Evodevo, Ecodevo, and medical science as well as related methodology (new or revised techniques) and bioresources. Resource papers describe a dataset, such as whole genome sequences and expressed sequence tags (ESTs), with some biological insights, which should be valuable for studying the subjects as mentioned above. Submission of review papers is also encouraged, especially those providing a new scope based on the authors’ own study, or a summarization of their study series.
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