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    This (lowercase (translateProductType product.productType)) has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by CrossRef.

    Charlton-Perkins, Mark Brown, Nadean L. and Cook, Tiffany A. 2011. The lens in focus: a comparison of lens development in Drosophila and vertebrates. Molecular Genetics and Genomics, Vol. 286, Issue. 3-4, p. 189.

    Kobayashi, Takuma Yasuda, Kunio and Araki, Masasuke 2010. Coordinated regulation of dorsal bone morphogenetic protein 4 and ventral Sonic hedgehog signaling specifies the dorso-ventral polarity in the optic vesicle and governs ocular morphogenesis through fibroblast growth factor 8 upregulation. Development, Growth & Differentiation, Vol. 52, Issue. 4, p. 351.

    Pontoriero, Giuseppe F. Deschamps, Paula Ashery-Padan, Ruth Wong, Ryan Yang, Ying Zavadil, Jiri Cvekl, Ales Sullivan, Shelley Williams, Trevor and West-Mays, Judith A. 2008. Cell autonomous roles for AP-2α in lens vesicle separation and maintenance of the lens epithelial cell phenotype. Developmental Dynamics, Vol. 237, Issue. 3, p. 602.

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  • Print publication year: 2004
  • Online publication date: January 2010

2 - Lens Induction and Determination

Summary

Introduction

Just as the ocular lens gathers and focuses light, so too has it captured and focused the attention of developmental biologists. Since Spemann's first experiments introduced the concept a century ago, the vertebrate lens has served as a model for the phenomenon of embryonic induction. Figure 2.1 provides a diagrammatic representation of the major steps in vertebrate lens determination to illustrate the physical relationships among developing tissues during stages pertinent to this review. The figure is based on the chick embryo, as its relatively flat topology during the earliest stages of development is particularly convenient for illustrative purposes. The lens differentiates from a region of head ectoderm that early in development lies adjacent to the region of the neural plate from which the retina will form (Fig. A). As development proceeds, the region of presumptive lens ectoderm (PLE) is not in contact with the retinal rudiment, as the neural plate folds up into a closed tube (Fig. C), but it is brought into close proximity to the retinal anlage by virtue of the outgrowth of the optic vesicle (OV) from the forebrain (Fig. D). The first overt signs of lens formation appear only after the OV establishes close contact with the PLE. After contact is made, the PLE thickens to form a placode (Fig. E) that subsequently invaginates simultaneously as the inward collapse of the OV forms the double-layered optic cup (Fig. F).

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Development of the Ocular Lens
  • Online ISBN: 9780511529825
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511529825
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