Sonic hedgehog (Shh) is secreted during neural tube (NT) development from the notochord to specify different progenitors in a concentration-dependent manner through the activity of activator (GliA) and repressor (GliR) forms of the Gli proteins. Andrew McMahon's group - using a combined genetic and bioinformatics approach to identify novel Gli targets during NT patterning -now suggest on p. 1977 that, surprisingly, GliA and GliR differ in their selection of target binding sites. Gli1-directed chromatin immunoprecipitation products were screened against genomic tiling arrays of putative Hedgehog targets(predicted from transcriptional profiling studies) to reveal both known and novel Shh-Gli targets, such as Nkx2.2 and Rab34,respectively. These targets were then validated by bioinformatics, expression studies in cell culture and transgenic experiments. Along the way, the authors have developed an algorithm that improves current in silico target prediction methods and the authors suggest that their approach could expand our understanding of transcriptional regulation in other developmental settings.
Targeting the targets of Hedgehog
Targeting the targets of Hedgehog. Development 15 May 2007; 134 (10): e1006. doi:
Download citation file:
Advertisement
Cited by
Development Journal Meeting 2023
-DevMeeting.png?versionId=4659)
We are delighted to announce that our 2023 Journal Meeting ‘Unconventional and Emerging Experimental Organisms in Cell and Developmental Biology’ will be held from 17-20 September 2023 at Wotton House, Surrey, UK. Find out more and register here.
Call for papers: Metabolic and Nutritional Control of Development and Regeneration

We are welcoming submissions for our next special issue, which will focus on metabolic and nutritional control of development and regeneration. Submission deadline: 15 May 2023.
preLights 5th Birthday webinar

preLights, our preprint highlighting service, is celebrating its 5th birthday this year. To mark the occasion, join us online on 14 March 2023 at 16:00 GMT for a discussion, led by four preLights alumni, on how to identify and navigate the challenges and opportunities while shaping your career as an early-career researcher.
Transitions in development: Daniel Grimes

Daniel Grimes’s lab studies the consequences of ciliary mutations, including left-right patterning defects and scoliosis. We interviewed Daniel to find out more about his career path, his experience of becoming a group leader and the influence of Jurassic Park.
Preprints in Development
(update)-InPreprints.png?versionId=4659)
As part of our efforts to support the use of preprints and help curate the preprint literature, we are delighted to launch a new article type: ‘In preprints’. These pieces will discuss one or more recent preprints and place them in a broader context.