Development of the Mouse Dermal Adipose Layer Occurs Independently of Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue and Is Marked by Restricted Early Expression of FABP4
Published 2013 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Development of the Mouse Dermal Adipose Layer Occurs Independently of Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue and Is Marked by Restricted Early Expression of FABP4
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
PLoS One
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages e59811
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Online
2013-03-27
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0059811
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- The Vascular Endothelium of the Adipose Tissue Gives Rise to Both White and Brown Fat Cells
- (2012) Khanh-Van Tran et al. Cell Metabolism
- Dermal -catenin activity in response to epidermal Wnt ligands is required for fibroblast proliferation and hair follicle initiation
- (2012) D. Chen et al. DEVELOPMENT
- NIH Image to ImageJ: 25 years of image analysis
- (2012) Caroline A Schneider et al. NATURE METHODS
- Adipocyte Lineage Cells Contribute to the Skin Stem Cell Niche to Drive Hair Cycling
- (2011) Eric Festa et al. CELL
- Analysis of gene networks in white adipose tissue development reveals a role for ETS2 in adipogenesis
- (2011) K. Birsoy et al. DEVELOPMENT
- The spatiotemporal development of adipose tissue
- (2011) J. Han et al. DEVELOPMENT
- Developmental Origins of the Adipocyte Lineage: New Insights from Genetics and Genomics Studies
- (2011) Nathalie Billon et al. Stem Cell Reviews and Reports
- Concise Review: Adipocyte Origins: Weighing the Possibilities
- (2011) Susan M. Majka et al. STEM CELLS
- Concise Review: Adipose-Derived Stromal Vascular Fraction Cells and Stem Cells: Let's Not Get Lost in Translation
- (2011) Jeffrey M. Gimble et al. STEM CELLS
- Role of canonical Wnt signaling/ -catenin via Dermo1 in cranial dermal cell development
- (2010) T. H. Tran et al. DEVELOPMENT
- Cutaneous consequences of inhibiting EGF receptor signaling in vivo: Normal hair follicle development, but retarded hair cycle induction and inhibition of adipocyte growth in EgfrWa5 mice
- (2010) Koji Sugawara et al. JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGICAL SCIENCE
- Fighting Fat with Fat: The Expanding Field of Adipose Stem Cells
- (2009) Daniel Zeve et al. Cell Stem Cell
- Emerging role of bone morphogenetic proteins in adipogenesis and energy metabolism
- (2009) Tim J. Schulz et al. CYTOKINE & GROWTH FACTOR REVIEWS
- KGF and EGF signalling block hair follicle induction and promote interfollicular epidermal fate in developing mouse skin
- (2009) G. D. Richardson et al. DEVELOPMENT
- The development and endocrine functions of adipose tissue
- (2009) Sylvia P. Poulos et al. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR ENDOCRINOLOGY
- Developmental origin of adipocytes: new insights into a pending question
- (2008) Nathalie Billon et al. BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
- Identification of White Adipocyte Progenitor Cells In Vivo
- (2008) Matthew S. Rodeheffer et al. CELL
- Beneficial Effects of Subcutaneous Fat Transplantation on Metabolism
- (2008) Thien T. Tran et al. Cell Metabolism
- -Catenin has sequential roles in the survival and specification of ventral dermis
- (2008) J. Ohtola et al. DEVELOPMENT
- C/EBP identifies differentiating preadipocytes around hair follicles in foetal and neonatal rat and mouse skin
- (2008) Kamila Wojciechowicz et al. EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY
- Cyclic dermal BMP signalling regulates stem cell activation during hair regeneration
- (2008) Maksim V. Plikus et al. NATURE
- White Fat Progenitor Cells Reside in the Adipose Vasculature
- (2008) W. Tang et al. SCIENCE
- Dynamic expression of the zinc-finger transcription factor Trps1 during hair follicle morphogenesis and cycling
- (2007) Katherine A. Fantauzzo et al. GENE EXPRESSION PATTERNS
Add your recorded webinar
Do you already have a recorded webinar? Grow your audience and get more views by easily listing your recording on Peeref.
Upload NowAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started