Virginia Papaioannou
Affiliations: | Columbia University, New York, NY |
Area:
Molecular Biology, Genetics, Animal Physiology BiologyGoogle:
"Virginia Papaioannou"Children
Sign in to add traineeTodd G. Davenport | grad student | 2001 | Columbia |
Sarah N. Goldin | grad student | 2002 | Columbia |
Naiche L. Adler | grad student | 2004 | Columbia |
Zachary Harrelson | grad student | 2005 | Columbia |
Ripla Arora | grad student | 2012 | Columbia |
Anna-Katerina (Kat) Hadjantonakis | post-doc |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
Papaioannou VE, Behringer RR. (2023) The "No Phenotype" Challenge in Analyzing Mutant Mice. Cold Spring Harbor Protocols |
Papaioannou VE, Behringer RR. (2023) Uncovering Phenotypes in Mutant Mice by Determining Embryo, Organ, Tissue, and Cell Developmental Potential. Cold Spring Harbor Protocols |
Papaioannou VE, Behringer RR. (2023) Getting around an Early Lethal Phenotype in Mice with Chimeras. Cold Spring Harbor Protocols |
Papaioannou VE, Behringer RR. (2023) Analysis of Mid- to Late-Gestation Phenotypes in Mice. Cold Spring Harbor Protocols |
Burn SF, Washkowitz AJ, Gavrilov S, et al. (2017) Postimplantation Mga expression and embryonic lethality of two gene-trap alleles. Gene Expression Patterns : Gep |
Concepcion D, Washkowitz AJ, DeSantis A, et al. (2017) Cell lineage of timed cohorts of Tbx6-expressing cells in wild type and Tbx6 mutant embryos. Biology Open |
Papaioannou VE. (2016) Concepts of Cell Lineage in Mammalian Embryos. Current Topics in Developmental Biology. 117: 185-97 |
Borok MJ, Papaioannou VE, Sussel L. (2016) Unique functions of Gata4 in mouse liver induction and heart development. Developmental Biology. 410: 213-22 |
Washkowitz AJ, Schall C, Zhang K, et al. (2015) Mga is essential for the survival of pluripotent cells during peri-implantation development. Development (Cambridge, England). 142: 31-40 |
Papaioannou VE. (2014) The T-box gene family: emerging roles in development, stem cells and cancer. Development (Cambridge, England). 141: 3819-33 |