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“There is another form of temptation, even more fraught with danger. This is the disease of curiosity...It is this which drives us to try and discover the secrets of nature, those secrets which are beyond our understanding, which can avail us nothing and which man should not wish to learn”

- Saint Augustine-

Late 4th/Early 5th century A.D.

 

  1. Gilboa, L. Organizing Stem Cell Units in the Drosophila Ovary (2015) Curr. Opin. Genet. 32, 31-36.

  2. Lengil, T., Gancz, D., Gilboa, L. Activin Signaling balances proliferation and differentiation of ovarian niche precursors and enables adjustment of niche numbers (2015) Development, 142, 883-892.

  3. Maimon, I., Popliker, M., Gilboa, L. Without children is required for Stat-mediated zfh1 transcription and for germline stem cell differentiation (2014) Development, 141, 2602-2610.

  4. Gancz, D., Gilboa, L. Hormonal Control of Stem Cell Systems (2013) Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol., 29, 137-162.

  5. Gancz, D., Gilboa, L. Insulin and Target of Rapamycin Signaling orchestrate the development of ovarian niche-stem cell units in Drosophila (2013)  Development, 140, 4145-4154.

  6. Gancz, D., Lengil, T., Gilboa, L. Coordinated Regulation of Niche and Stem Cell Precursors by Hormonal Signaling (2011) PLoS Biology, 9(11).

  7. Maimon, I., Gilboa, L. Dissection and Staining of Drosophila Larval Ovaries (2011) JoVE, May 13;(51).

  8. Gilboa, L., Boutros, M. Celebrating 100 years of Drosophila research (2010) Embo Rep., 11, 724-726.

  9. Gilboa, L. A triumvirate at the testis tip: sharing the power of stem cell control (2008) Dev. Cell, 15, 5-6.

  10. Gilboa, L., Lehmann, R. Changing places: A Novel Type of Niche and Stem Cell Coordination in the Drosophila Ovary (2007) Cell Stem Cell, 1, 239-240.

  11. Gilboa, L., Lehmann, R. Soma-germ line interactions coordinate homeostasis and growth in the Drosophila gonad (2006) Nature, 443, 97-100.

  12. Gilboa, L., Lehmann, R. How far is Venus from Mars? The genetics of germ line stem cells in Drosophila females and males (2004) Development, 131, 4895-905.

  13. Gilboa, L., Lehmann, R. Repression of primordial germ cell differentiation parallels germ line stem cell maintenance (2004) Curr. Biol., 14, 981-986.

  14. Gilboa, L., Forbes, A., Tazuke, S.I., Fuller, M.T., Lehmann, R. Germ line stem cell differentiation in Drosophila requires gap junctions and proceeds via an intermediate state (2003) Development, 130, 6625-34.

  15. Tazuke, S.I., Schulz, C., Gilboa, L., Fogarty, M., Mahowald, A.P., Guichet, A., Ephrussi, A., Wood, C.G., Lehmann, R., Fuller, M.T. A germline-specific gap junction protein required for survival of differentiating early germ cells (2003) Development, 129, 2529-39.

  16. Gilboa, L.*, Nohe, A.*, Geissendörfer, T., Sebald, W., Henis, Y.I., Knaus, P. Bone Morphogenetic Protein Receptor Complexes on the Surface of Live Cells: A New Oligomerization Mode for Serine/Threonine Kinase Receptors (2000) Mol. Bio. Cell., 11, 1023-35.

  17. Wells, R.*, Gilboa, L.*, Sun, Y., Liu, X., Henis, Y.I., Lodish, H.F. Transforming Growth Factor b Induces Formation of a Dithiothreitol–Resistant Type I / Type II Receptor Complex in Live Cells (1999) J. Bio. Chem., 274, 5716-5722.

  18. Gilboa, L.*, Wells, R.*, Lodish, H.F., Henis, Y.I. Oligomeric Structure of Type I and Type II Transforming Growth Factor b Receptors: Homodimers Form in the ER and Persist at the Plasma Membrane (1998) J. Cell Biol., 140, 767-777.

  19. Gilboa, L., Ben-Levy, R., Yarden, Y., Henis, Y.I. Roles for a Cytoplasmic Tyrosine and Tyrosine Kinase Activity in the Interactions of Neu Receptors with Coated Pits (1995) J. Biol. Chem., 270, 7061-7067.

 

 

 

 

The Gilboa Group

 

    STEM CELL UNIT FORMATION

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