Eric Vogt
Harvard University
4 Papers
27 Citations
Eric Vogt is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Frizzled & Cas9. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
No Evidence that Wnt Ligands Are Required for Planar Cell Polarity in Drosophila.
TL;DR: The hypothesis that Wnt ligands contribute to PCP signaling in the Drosophila wing or notum is supported but the results do not support the hypothesis.
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Large-Scale Transgenic Drosophila Resource Collections for Loss- and Gain-of-Function Studies.
Jonathan Zirin,Yanhui Hu,Lu-Ping Liu,Donghui Yang-Zhou,Ryan Colbeth,Dong Yan,Benjamin Scott Ewen-Campen,Rong Tao,Eric Vogt,Sara VanNest,Cooper Cavers,Christians Villalta,Aram Comjean,Jin Sun,Xia Wang,Yu Jia,Ruibao Zhu,Ping Peng,Jinchao Yu,Da Shen,Yuhao Qiu,Limmond Ayisi,Henna Ragoowansi,Ethan Fenton,Senait Efrem,Annette L. Parks,Kuniaki Saito,Shu Kondo,Liz Perkins,Stephanie E. Mohr,Jian-Quan Ni,Norbert Perrimon,Norbert Perrimon +32 more
TL;DR: The Transgenic RNAi Project (TRiP), a Drosophila melanogaster functional genomics platform at Harvard Medical School, was initiated in 2008 to generate and distribute a genome-scale collection of RNA interference (RNAi) fly stocks, and this work presents an update on these libraries of publicly available RNAi and CRISPR fly stocks.
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Wnt ligands are not required for planar cell polarity in the Drosophila wing or notum
TL;DR: Support is found for the hypothesis that Wnt ligands contribute to PCP signaling in the Drosophila wing or notum using split-Gal4 co-expression analysis, systematic pairwise and triple somatic CRISPR-based knock-outs and double RNAi experiments, and somatic knock-out of evi did not produce detectable PCP phenotypes.
Large-scale transgenic Drosophila resource collections for loss- and gain-of-function studies
Jonathan Zirin,Yanhui Hu,Lu-Ping Liu,Donghui Yang-Zhou,Ryan Colbeth,Dong Yan,Benjamin Scott Ewen-Campen,Rong Tao,Eric Vogt,Sara VanNest,Cooper Cavers,Christians Villalta,Aram Comjean,Jin Sun,Xia Wang,Yu Jia,Ruibao Zhu,Ping Peng,Jinchao Yu,Da Shen,Yuhao Qiu,Limmond Ayisi,Henna Ragoowansi,Ethan Fenton,Senait Efrem,Annette L. Parks,Kuniaki Saito,Shu Kondo,Liz Perkins,Stephanie E. Mohr,Jian-Quan Ni,Norbert Perrimon,Norbert Perrimon +32 more
TL;DR: The Transgenic RNAi Project (TRiP), a Drosophila functional genomics platform at Harvard Medical School, was initiated in 2008 to generate and distribute a genome-scale collection of RNAi fly stocks, and this work presents an update on these libraries of publicly available RNAi and CRISPR fly stocks.