1. Orchestrating ontogenesis: variations on a theme by sonic hedgehog
- Author
-
Marysia Placzek and Philip W. Ingham
- Subjects
animal structures ,Embryonic Development ,Organogenesis ,Models, Biological ,Nervous System ,Feedback ,Cell Movement ,Signalling molecules ,Genetics ,Animals ,Drosophila Proteins ,Hedgehog Proteins ,Sonic hedgehog ,Cellular programming ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,Cell Proliferation ,biology ,Repertoire ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Multicellular organism ,Drosophila melanogaster ,Vertebrates ,embryonic structures ,biology.protein ,Neuroscience ,Function (biology) ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Embryonic development is an emergent process in which increasing complexity is generated by sequential cellular interactions. Recently, it has become clear that such interactions are mediated by just a few families of signalling molecules; but how does this limited repertoire elicit the diversity of form that is characteristic of multicellular organisms? Here we review the various ways in which a member of one such family, the sonic hedgehog (SHH) protein, is deployed during embryonic development. These examples of SHH function provide paradigms for inductive interactions that should help to inform attempts to recapitulate cellular programming and organogenesis in vitro.
- Published
- 2006