1) Hensen's node is a structure located in the anterior portion of the primitive streak in developing chick embryos that patterns the anterior-posterior axis and directs the development of important structures like the notochord and neural tube.
2) Experiments in the 1930s showed that when Hensen's node is removed from a chick embryo and placed in another location, it causes the notochord, somites, and neural tube to form in the new location, demonstrating that Hensen's node controls axis formation.
3) Hensen's node secretes proteins that dorsalize surrounding tissues, including chordin, Noggin, and Nodal which repress bone morphogenetic proteins, as well as fibroblast growth