Genetics of craniofacial development and malformation

AOM Wilkie, GM Morriss-Kay - Nature Reviews Genetics, 2001 - nature.com
AOM Wilkie, GM Morriss-Kay
Nature Reviews Genetics, 2001nature.com
The head is anatomically the most sophisticated part of the body and its evolution was
fundamental to the origin of vertebrates; understanding its development is a formidable
problem in biology. A synthesis of embryology, evolution and mouse genetics is shaping our
understanding of head development and in this review we discuss its application to studies
of human craniofacial malformations. Many of these disorders have their origins in specific
embryological processes, including abnormalities of brain patterning, of the migration and …
Abstract
The head is anatomically the most sophisticated part of the body and its evolution was fundamental to the origin of vertebrates; understanding its development is a formidable problem in biology. A synthesis of embryology, evolution and mouse genetics is shaping our understanding of head development and in this review we discuss its application to studies of human craniofacial malformations. Many of these disorders have their origins in specific embryological processes, including abnormalities of brain patterning, of the migration and fusion of tissues in the face, and of bone differentiation in the skull vault.
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