“…Thus, β-catenin acts as a master regulatory gene, responsible for the control of multiple processes. During early animal embryogenesis, β-catenin specifies the site of endoderm internalization and promotes posterior fates in most studied systems (Byrum and Wikramanayake, 2013;Darras et al, 2011;Haegel et al, 1995;Henry et al, 2008;Lee et al, 2006;Logan et al, 1999;Srivastava et al, 2014;Wikramanayake et al, 2003). In later stages of development, the canonical Wnt pathway influences the formation of multiple cell types, tissues and organ systems (Aulehla et al, 2008;Grigoryan et al, 2008;Hari et al, 2002;Holland et al, 2005;Kiecker and Niehrs, 2001; Lewis et al, 2004;Petersen and Reddien, 2009a;Schneider and Bowerman, 2007;Tan et al, 2006;Watanabe et al, 2014), and most prominently, the anteroposterior (AP) patterning of the vertebrate central nervous system (Ciani and Salinas, 2005).…”