Niswander Lee
Molecular Biology Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Int J Dev Biol. 2002;46(7):877-81.
Vertebrate limbs display three obvious axes of asymmetry. These three axes are referred to as proximal-distal (Pr-D; shoulder to digit tips), anterior-posterior (A-P; thumb to little finger), and dorsal-ventral (D-V; back of hand to palm). At a molecular level, it is now possible to define the signals that control patterning of each of the three axes of the developing limb. These signals do not work in isolation though but rather their activity must be integrated such that the various limb elements are coordinately formed with relation to these three axes. This review will provide an overview of the intricate medley amongst the molecular signals that serve to establish and coordinate patterning information along the three primary axes of the limb.
脊椎动物的肢体呈现出三个明显的不对称轴。这三个轴分别称为近远轴(Pr-D;从肩部到指尖)、前后轴(A-P;从拇指到小指)和背腹轴(D-V;从手背到手掌)。在分子水平上,现在已经能够确定控制发育中肢体三个轴中每个轴模式形成的信号。然而,这些信号并非独立起作用,而是它们的活性必须整合起来,以便各种肢体元件相对于这三个轴协调形成。本综述将概述分子信号之间错综复杂的混合情况,这些信号用于沿着肢体的三个主要轴建立和协调模式形成信息。