New Results
Evolutionarily conserved waves of tooth replacement in the gecko are dependent on local signaling
Kirstin S. Brink, View ORCID ProfileEric Cytrynbaum, Theresa M. Grieco, Joaquin I. Henriquez, Anna Zhitnitsky, View ORCID ProfileJoy M. Richman
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.17.513312
Kirstin S. Brink
2Department of Geological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Canada
Eric Cytrynbaum
5Department of Mathematics, University of British Columbia, Canada
Theresa M. Grieco
3STEMCELL Technologies, Vancouver, BC, CANADA
Joaquin I. Henriquez
1Department of Oral Health Sciences, University of British Columbia, Canada
Anna Zhitnitsky
4Department of Physics of Complex Systems, Weitzman Institute, Israel
Joy M. Richman
1Department of Oral Health Sciences, University of British Columbia, Canada

Article usage
Posted November 18, 2022.
Evolutionarily conserved waves of tooth replacement in the gecko are dependent on local signaling
Kirstin S. Brink, Eric Cytrynbaum, Theresa M. Grieco, Joaquin I. Henriquez, Anna Zhitnitsky, Joy M. Richman
bioRxiv 2022.11.17.513312; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.17.513312
Subject Area
Subject Areas
- Biochemistry (9176)
- Bioengineering (6807)
- Bioinformatics (24069)
- Biophysics (12161)
- Cancer Biology (9568)
- Cell Biology (13847)
- Clinical Trials (138)
- Developmental Biology (7662)
- Ecology (11739)
- Epidemiology (2066)
- Evolutionary Biology (15547)
- Genetics (10673)
- Genomics (14366)
- Immunology (9517)
- Microbiology (22916)
- Molecular Biology (9135)
- Neuroscience (49170)
- Paleontology (358)
- Pathology (1488)
- Pharmacology and Toxicology (2584)
- Physiology (3851)
- Plant Biology (8353)
- Synthetic Biology (2302)
- Systems Biology (6207)
- Zoology (1304)