World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
72
Citations
17453
World Ranking
6345
National Ranking
2971

Overview

Christopher Wylie is affiliated with Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center in the United States. Their professional work is connected primarily to this institution.

No recent papers, co-authors, frequent publication venues, book publications, fields of study, subfields, main topics of work, or awards are listed in the available data. Therefore, there is no public information on specific research outputs, collaborations, or areas of specialization associated with Christopher Wylie at this time.

The absence of detailed research topics or publications suggests either a limited publicly documented research record or that available records do not cover their complete professional activities. As such, Christopher Wylie's research contributions cannot be further detailed beyond their institutional affiliation.

Best Publications

  • Overexpression of cadherins and underexpression of β-catenin inhibit dorsal mesoderm induction in early Xenopus embryos

    Janet Heasman;Aaron Crawford;Kim Goldstone;Peggy Garner-Hamrick

  • βCatenin Signaling Activity Dissected in the Early Xenopus Embryo: A Novel Antisense Approach

    Janet Heasman;Matt Kofron;Chris Wylie

  • Maternal wnt11 activates the canonical wnt signaling pathway required for axis formation in Xenopus embryos.

    Qinghua Tao;Chika Yokota;Helbert Puck;Matt Kofron

  • Effects of the Steel Gene Product on Mouse Primordial Germ Cells in Culture

    I Godin;Richard W Deed;J Cooke;K Zsebo

  • The chemokine SDF1/CXCL12 and its receptor CXCR4 regulate mouse germ cell migration and survival

    Kathleen A. Molyneaux;Hélène Zinszner;Prabhat S. Kunwar;Kyle Schaible

  • The role of maternal VegT in establishing the primary germ layers in Xenopus embryos

    Jian Zhang;Douglas W Houston;Mary Lou King;Christopher Payne

  • The onset of germ cell migration in the mouse embryo.

    Robert Anderson;Trevor K. Copeland;Hans Schöler;Janet Heasman

  • Mesoderm induction in Xenopus is a zygotic event regulated by maternal VegT via TGFbeta growth factors

    Matt Kofron;Teresa Demel;Jenny Xanthos;Jamie Lohr

  • Migratory and postmigratory mouse primordial germ cells behave differently in culture

    Peter J. Donovan;David Stott;Linda A. Cairns;Janet Heasman

  • Primordial germ cell migration.

    Kathleen Molyneaux;Christopher Wylie

  • Mouse primordial germ cells lacking beta1 integrins enter the germline but fail to migrate normally to the gonads.

    R. Anderson;R. Fassler;E. Georges-Labouesse;R.O. Hynes

  • Xklp1, a chromosomal Xenopus kinesin-like protein essential for spindle organization and chromosome positioning.

    Isabelle Vernos;Jos Raats;Tatsuya Hirano;Janet Heasman

  • Maternal VegT is the initiator of a molecular network specifying endoderm in Xenopus laevis

    J.B. Xanthos;M. Kofron;C. Wylie;J. Heasman

  • The mitochondrial cloud of Xenopus oocytes: The source of germinal granule material

    Janet Heasman;J. Quarmby;C.C. Wylie

  • Primordial germ cells

    C.C. Wylie

  • Maternal beta-catenin establishes a ‘dorsal signal’ in early Xenopus embryos

    C. Wylie;M. Kofron;C. Payne;R. Anderson

  • Interactions between primordial germ cells play a role in their migration in mouse embryos

    M. Gomperts;M. Garcia-Castro;C. Wylie;J. Heasman

  • Steel factor controls midline cell death of primordial germ cells and is essential for their normal proliferation and migration.

    Christopher Runyan;Kyle Schaible;Kathleen Molyneaux;Zhuoqiao Wang

  • TGF beta 1 inhibits proliferation and has a chemotropic effect on mouse primordial germ cells in culture

    Isabelle Godin;C. C. Wylie

  • Genital ridges exert long-range effects on mouse primordial germ cell numbers and direction of migration in culture

    Isabelle Godin;Christopher Wylie;Janet Heasman

Frequent Co-Authors

Janet Heasman
Janet Heasman Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
James C. Smith
James C. Smith The Francis Crick Institute
Peter J. Donovan
Peter J. Donovan University of California, Irvine
Brian H. Anderton
Brian H. Anderton King's College London
Charles ffrench-Constant
Charles ffrench-Constant University of Edinburgh
Anne McLaren
Anne McLaren University of Cambridge
Aaron M. Zorn
Aaron M. Zorn Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Makoto Asashima
Makoto Asashima Teikyo University
Isabelle Vernos
Isabelle Vernos Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats

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Best Scientists Citing Christopher Wylie