https://www.selleckchem.com/products/jq1.html We have determined that the effects of increased Acvr1-mediated signaling by the Acvr1R206H mutation are not limited to the first digit but alter BMP signaling, Gdf5+ joint progenitor cell localization, and joint development in a manner that differently affects individual digits during embryogenesis. The Acvr1R206H mutation leads to delayed and disrupted joint specification and cleavage in the digits and alters the development of cartilage and endochondral ossification at sites of joint morphogenesis. These findings demonstrate an important role for ACVR1-mediated BMP signaling in the regulation of joint and skeletal formation, show a direct link between failure to restrict BMP signaling in the digit joint interzone and failure of joint cleavage at the presumptive interzone, and implicate impaired, digit-specific joint development as the proximal cause of digit malformation in FOP.In a recent paper, we showed the difference between the first stage of the one-substrate and the two-substrate transketolase reactions - the possibility of transfer of glycolaldehyde formed as a result of cleavage of the donor substrate from the thiazole ring of thiamine diphosphate to its aminopyrimidine ring through the tricycle formation stage, which is necessary for binding and splitting the second molecule of donor substrate [O.N. Solovjeva et al., The mechanism of a one-substrate transketolase reaction, Biosci. Rep. 40 (8) (2020) BSR20180246]. Here we show that under the action of the reducing agent a tricycle accumulates in a significant amount. Therefore, a significant decrease in the reaction rate of the one-substrate transketolase reaction compared to the two-substrate reaction is due to the stage of transferring the first glycolaldehyde molecule from the thiazole ring to the aminopyrimidine ring of thiamine diphosphate. Fragmentation of the four-carbon thiamine diphosphate derivatives showed that two glycolaldehyde molecules are boun