2006
DOI: 10.1002/dvdy.20821
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Jag2‐Notch1 signaling regulates oral epithelial differentiation and palate development

Abstract: During mammalian palatogenesis, palatal shelves initially grow vertically from the medial sides of the paired maxillary processes flanking the developing tongue and subsequently elevate and fuse with each other above the tongue to form the intact secondary palate. Pathological palate-mandible or palate-tongue fusions have been reported in humans and other mammals, but the molecular and cellular mechanisms that prevent such aberrant adhesions during normal palate development are unknown. We previously reported … Show more

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Cited by 98 publications
(141 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
(94 reference statements)
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“…1B). At the earliest stages examined, headskin and VT consisted largely of a single layer of basal cells, whereas DT and BG epithelia were already two to three cell layers thick, in agreement with previous reports (Baratz and Farbman, 1975;Casey et al, 2006). Growth kinetics varied across tissue types, with DT and BG epithelia stratifying most rapidly and VT more slowly.…”
Section: Oral Epithelial Development Is Diverse and Dynamicsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…1B). At the earliest stages examined, headskin and VT consisted largely of a single layer of basal cells, whereas DT and BG epithelia were already two to three cell layers thick, in agreement with previous reports (Baratz and Farbman, 1975;Casey et al, 2006). Growth kinetics varied across tissue types, with DT and BG epithelia stratifying most rapidly and VT more slowly.…”
Section: Oral Epithelial Development Is Diverse and Dynamicsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Jag1 +/− and Jag2 +/− mice were obtained from the Jackson Laboratory. Genotypes were confirmed by PCR (32)(33)(34), and experiments were performed with generations F4-F6. Littermates were used as wild-type controls.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Disruption of the Notch ligand jagged 2 (Jag2) caused cleft palate in Jag2 DSL/DSL mice as a result of aberrant adhesion of the palatal shelves to the tongue (Jiang et al, 1998). Jag2 is expressed throughout the oral epithelium and is required for the maintenance of periderm cells (Casey et al, 2006), which are flattened epithelial surface cells that have been proposed to regulate fusion competence (Fitchett and Hay, 1989). Palate-tongue fusion, albeit less severe, also occurs in Fgf10 -/-embryos, and Jag2 expression was reduced in the mutant palatal epithelium, suggesting that Fgf10 signaling acts upstream of Jag2-Notch signaling to regulate palatal epithelial differentiation .…”
Section: Temporal and Spatial Control Of Shelf Adhesionmentioning
confidence: 99%