Journal article
Craniosynostosis-associated variants in the IL-11R complex: new insights and questions
NA Sims, MDW Griffin
FEBS Journal | WILEY | Published : 2024
DOI: 10.1111/febs.17078
Abstract
Skull growth involves the expansion of both the flat calvarial bones of the skull and the fibrous marginal zones, termed sutures, between them. This process depends on co-ordinated proliferation of mesenchymal-derived progenitor cells within the sutures, and their differentiation to osteoblasts which produce the bone matrix required to expand the size of the bony plates. Defects lead to premature closure of these sutures, termed craniosynostosis, resulting in heterogeneous head shape differences due to restricted growth of one or more sutures. The impact on the individual depends on how many and which sutures are affected and the severity of the effect. Several genetic loci are responsible, ..
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Grants
Awarded by University of Melbourne
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia) to NAS (Senior Research Fellowship 1154819, Investigator Grant 2025750), from the Australian Research Council (Discovery Project DP230102422) to MDWG and by the Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Support Program to St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research. Open access publishing facilitated by The University of Melbourne, as part of the Wiley - The University of Melbourne agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.