C
Claudio D. Stern
Researcher at University College London
Publications - 222
Citations - 18820
Claudio D. Stern is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Primitive streak & Gastrulation. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 214 publications receiving 18060 citations. Previous affiliations of Claudio D. Stern include University of Oxford & Columbia University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Book reviewHandbook of Chemical Neuroanatomy: Methods in Chemical Neuroanatomy. Edited by A. Bjorklund and T. Hokfelt. Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1983. Cloth bound, 548 pp. UK £140. (Volume 1 in the series).
Journal ArticleDOI
Contact inhibition of locomotion in vivo controls neural crest directional migration
Carlos Carmona-Fontaine,Helen K. Matthews,Sei Kuriyama,Mauricio Moreno,Graham Dunn,Madeline Parsons,Claudio D. Stern,Roberto Mayor +7 more
TL;DR: The first example of contact inhibition of locomotion in vivo is provided, an explanation for coherent directional migration of groups of cells is provided and a previously unknown role for non-canonical Wnt signalling is established.
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Initiation of neural induction by FGF signalling before gastrulation
TL;DR: It is shown that the organizer and some of its precursor cells produce a fibroblast growth factor signal, which can initiate, and is required for, neural induction.
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Fate mapping and cell lineage analysis of Hensen's node in the chick embryo.
TL;DR: Fate maps of chick Hensen's node were generated using DiI and the lineage of individual cells studied by intracellular injection of lysine-rhodamine-dextran (LRD) and the cell types contained within the node are organized both spatially and temporally.
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Segmentation in the vertebrate nervous system
Roger J. Keynes,Claudio D. Stern +1 more
TL;DR: Zinc iodideosmium tetroxide staining of chick embryos reveals that motor and sensory axons grow from the neural tube region through the anterior (rostral) half of each successive somite, showing that neural segmentation is not intrinsic to the Neural tube.