Nancy Wanek
University of California, Irvine
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Featured researches published by Nancy Wanek.
Developmental Biology | 1991
Terry F. Hayamizu; Stanley K. Sessions; Nancy Wanek; Susan V. Bryant
The effects of exogenous transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) on chick limb development in vivo were studied by implanting carriers of TGF-beta 1 into developing wing buds. Agarose beads were soaked in solutions containing TGF-beta 1 and implanted into wing buds at stages 18 to 27. Localized application of TGF-beta 1 to distal regions of the wing bud caused specific skeletal elements in the limb to be reduced or absent. The particular proximal-distal limb element affected depended on the stage at which the bead was implanted. Position of the bead in the anterior-posterior axis also influenced the pattern of affected structures. Experiments in which TGF-beta 1 beads were implanted and then removed at 24- and 48-hr intervals indicate that there are specific periods during which a skeletal element appears to be sensitive to the effects of exogenous TGF-beta 1. In a few cases, beads placed in proximal positions in later staged limbs resulted in formation of ectopic cartilage near the bead. These results suggest that exposure to exogenous TGF-beta 1 in vivo influences the development of skeletal elements in the chick limb in a stage- and position-dependent manner.
Developmental Biology | 1991
Nancy Wanek; Susan V. Bryant
This study describes the temporal pattern of posterior positional identity in mouse limb bud cells. To do this wedges of tissue from the posterior edge of mouse limb buds at various stages (limb stages: Wanek et al., 1989b. J. Exp. Zool. 249, 41-49) were grafted to the anterior edge of a host chick embryo wing bud. Grafts of mouse posterior cells are able to induce the formation of supernumerary digits every time when they are taken from buds from stage 3 through stage 6. At stage 7, the frequency declines and by stage 8 the chick cells no longer respond. The results indicate a change in tissue properties at stage 7, which progresses by stage 8 to the point at which posterior positional identity is no longer detectable by this assay. These temporal changes in this aspect of limb pattern formation can be used as an additional criterion to guide the identification of genes involved in the specification of posterior positional identity.
Archive | 1991
Susan V. Bryant; Terry F. Hayamizu; Nancy Wanek; David M. Gardiner
An understanding of the way in which cells acquire and utilize positional information in their interactions with one another to generate new pattern, awaits the identification of the molecules that specify positional identity. The vertebrate limb has long been used as an experimental model for the study of pattern formation, and there is currently a considerable body of knowledge about limb development and regeneration at the level of tissues and cells. This information has allowed for the development of a conceptual framework within which to study limbs and from which functional assays for genes involved in pattern formation can be fashioned.
Journal of Experimental Zoology | 1989
Nancy Wanek; Ken Muneoka; Gregory V. Holler-Dinsmore; R. Burton; Susan V. Bryant
Journal of Experimental Zoology | 1986
Ken Muneoka; Nancy Wanek; Susan V. Bryant
Journal of Experimental Zoology | 1989
Nancy Wanek; Ken Muneoka; Susan V. Bryant
Journal of Experimental Zoology | 1989
Ken Muneoka; Nancy Wanek; Susan V. Bryant
Developmental Biology | 1994
Terry F. Hayamizu; Nancy Wanek; Gail Taylor; Christopher Trevino; Changping Shi; Rosalie Anderson; David M. Gardiner; Ken Muneoka; Susan V. Bryant
Developmental Biology | 1993
Tsutomu Sugiyama; Nancy Wanek
Journal of Experimental Zoology | 1982
Nancy Wanek; Richard D. Campbell