dickkopf
See also: Dickkopf
English
WOTD – 7 April 2023
Etymology
Borrowed from German Dickkopf (“stubborn person”, literally “large head”), from the fact that Dickkopf-related protein 1 (DKK1), one of the dickkopf proteins, was found to be required for head formation in embryos. The word was coined by Andrei Glinka, Wei Wu, Hajo Delius, A. Paula Monaghan, Claudia Blumenstock, and Christof Niehrs in a 1998 article published in Nature:[1] see the quotation.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈdɪkˌkɒpf/
Audio (Southern English) (file) - (General American) IPA(key): /ˈdɪkˌkɑ(p)f/, /-ˌkɔ(p)f/
- Hyphenation: dick‧kopf
Noun
dickkopf (plural dickkopfs)
- (biochemistry) Any of a family of glycoproteins that is involved in the development of the embryo. [from 1998]
- [1998 January 22, Andrei Glinka [et al.], “Dickkopf-1 is a Member of a New Family of Secreted Proteins and Functions in Head Induction”, in Nature, volume 391, number 6665, London: Nature Research, DOI: , ISSN 0028-0836, OCLC 918993798, abstract, page 357:
- Here we describe dickkopf-1 (dkk-1), which encodes Dkk-1, a secreted inducer of Spemann's organizer in Xenopus and a member of a new protein family.]
- 2015 December 22, Kathryn L. McCabe [et al.], “Efficient Generation of Human Embryonic Stem Cell-derived Corneal Endothelial Cells by Directed Differentiation”, in PLOS ONE, volume 10, number 12, San Francisco, Calif.: PLOS, DOI: , ISSN 1932-6203, OCLC 70662135, article number e0145266:
- Some of the factors tested included: angiopoietin like protein 7 (ANGLPT7), epidermal growth factor (EGF), fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2), transforming growth factor beta 2 (TGF β 2), platelet derived growth factor b (PDGFB), and dickkopf related protein 2 (DKK2).
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Translations
References
- Michael H. Kagey; Xi He (December 2017), “Rationale for Targeting the Wnt Signalling Modulator Dickkopf-1 for Oncology”, in British Journal of Pharmacology, volume 174, issue 24, London: Wiley-Blackwell for the British Pharmacological Society, DOI:, ISSN 0007-1188, OCLC 1167996437: “DKK1 was originally identified in Xenopus as an inhibitor of β‐catenin‐dependent Wnt signalling and an inducer of head formation during embryogenesis, a phenotype that coined the Dickkopf (German for ‘big head, stubborn’) nomenclature (Glinka et al., 1998).”
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