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Cover image
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Cover: The skeleton of the zebrafish fin consists of segmented and bifurcated rays made of the mineralised bony lepidotrichia (magenta) and the soft cartilaginous actinotrichia (cyan) at their distal tips. Following partial amputation, fins are capable of complete self-restoration, a regenerative process that requires IGF signalling. See Research article by Chablais and Jazwinska on p. 871.Close Modal - PDF Icon PDF LinkTable of contents
HYPOTHESIS
REVIEW
DEVELOPMENT AND STEM CELLS
RESEARCH ARTICLE
SOX9 is a major negative regulator of cartilage vascularization, bone marrow formation and endochondral ossification
ARTICLE OF INTEREST IN OTHER COB JOURNALS
FROM JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
IN THIS ISSUE
Development Journal Meeting 2023
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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
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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.