TOP >> UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA >> Developmental biology
 
Browse Institutions
You are viewing titles for UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA in the Developmental biology available through the UMI Dissertations & Thesis Gradwoorks site
 
Three essays on gender inequalities, human capital and development in Guatemala
Control of denticle diversity in the Drosophila embryo
 
Interplay of extrinsic and intrinsic cues in cell-fate decisions
Transcriptional and translational control of zebrafish mesodermal development
 
Cellular and molecular analyses of neural and synaptic development in zebrafish
Modeling type I neurofibromatosis in the zebrafish Danio rerio
 
The role of preMBT transcription in Xenopus development
Roles of Protein Factors in Regulation of Imprinted Gene Expression
 
Functional analysis of the Cdk7/cyclin H/Mat1 complex in mouse embryonic stem cells and embryos
SDF1 antagonism of axonal repellents requires multiple G protein components and an ADAM metalloprotease
 
Transcriptional Integration of Wnt and Nodal Signals in the Establishment of the Spemann Organizer
The molecular mechanism for vegetative phase change: Regulation of miR156 expression and action
 
Mechanisms of unplugged/MuSK-mediated neuromuscular synapse formation
Valproic acid disrupts primitive hematopoiesis in Xenopus laevis through the inhibition of histone deacetylase 3
 
The requirement of Sonic hedgehog in the hypothalamus
The guidance of olfactory sensory axons to identifiable protoglomeruli in the larval zebrafish olfactory bulb
 
Extracellular leucine-rich repeat protein LET-4 is required to organize the extracellular matrix and maintain junctions in C. elegans epithelia
Meiotic origins of maternal age-related aneuploidy
 
A notch above bowl: Specification of niche cells in the Drosophila testis
Asymmetric T cell division and the self-renewal of specific immunity
 
Evolution and dynamics of the human gut virome
Signal transduction mechanisms in commissural axon guidance: The role of intracellular tyrosine kinases in Netrin-DCC/frazzled axon attraction