1998
Handed asymmetry in the mouse: Understanding how things go right (or left) by studying how they go wrong
Supp D, Brueckner M, Potter S. Handed asymmetry in the mouse: Understanding how things go right (or left) by studying how they go wrong. Seminars In Cell And Developmental Biology 1998, 9: 77-87. PMID: 9572117, DOI: 10.1006/scdb.1997.0186.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsSevere morphological defectsAnalysis of genesAsymmetric expression patternLeft/right axisRight patterningGenetic pathwaysMouse mutationExpression patternsMorphological defectsDevelopmental asymmetryVertebratesImportance of regulationMutant micePattern formationRight axisGenesMutationsRegulationPathwayPatterningMiceDisruption
1991
Establishment of Left‐Right Asymmetry in Vertebrates: Genetically Distinct Steps are Involved
Brueckner M, McGrath J, D'Eustachio P, Horwich A. Establishment of Left‐Right Asymmetry in Vertebrates: Genetically Distinct Steps are Involved. Novartis Foundation Symposia 1991, 162: 202-218. PMID: 1802643, DOI: 10.1002/9780470514160.ch12.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsRestriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) markersFragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markersMouse chromosome 12Length polymorphism markersTiming of expressionLeft-right determinationLeft-right axisLeft-right asymmetryPositional cloningPolymorphism markersRecessive allelesGene productsPattern of inheritanceChromosome 12Developmental pathwaysLinkage analysisCardiac tubeFunction mutationsGenesMolecular analysisDevelopmental stepsFirst organAffected embryosVertebratesDistinct phenotypes