Left–right asymmetry is a fundamental characteristic of vertebrate embryogenesis, ensuring that internal organs develop with correct spatial orientation. This process is orchestrated by a complex ...
Graduate student Shubham Sinha (left) and assistant professor of physics Vivek Prakash (right) stand in front of projections of cell motion inside chicken embyros that they captured. Their research, ...
Most animals, including humans, have bilateral symmetry, which means our bodies are pretty symmetrical. At least on the ...
Emu wings exhibit a left-right asymmetry in the reduction and fusion of skeletal elements. Figure 2. Proposed Model: Emu wing buds contain muscle progenitor cells with dual somite-derived myogenic and ...