The laboratory studies the genetic basis by which form and
structure are regulated during vertebrate development. We combine classical
methods of experimental embryology with modern molecular and genetic
techniques for regulating gene expression during embryogenesis.
One of the classic systems for the study of embryonic development
is the chick embryo, where grafting experiments have given profound
insight into such questions as the patterning of developing limb axes,
and the control of organogenesis. These classical experiments provide
a context for interpreting modern molecular studies and the methods
they employed also give us an additional set of tools for manipulating
the embryo. For example, we can use retroviral vectors to alter gene
expression in the context of specific transplantations or extirpations.
Important complementary information is gained from studies taking advantage
of the powerful techniques for regulated misexpression and gene deletion
in the mouse.
The lab has major efforts underway exploiting these approaches
to understand limb development, from the establishment of the initial
axes, to understanding the difference in genetic controls between an
arm and a leg, through later specific events such as differential bone
growth and specific muscle patterning; and to understand the establishment
of left-right asymmetry (e.g.. why your heart is on the left and not
the right) from the initiation of the left-right difference, through
signaling cascades, to left- or right-specific morphogenesis. We also
currently have projects looking at patterning of the gut, the differentiation
of the somites and morphogenesis of the heart, as well as biochemical
analysis of the hedgehog signal transduction system, a key signaling
pathway during development.
Limb Development
Richard Pearse
Amitabha Bandyopadhyay
Heart Development
José
Rivera-Feliciano
microRNAs and Development
Jennifer
Mansfield
Bone and Tendon Development
Amitabha Bandyopadhyay