FIGURE

Fig. 10

ID
ZDB-FIG-091016-22
Publication
Emond et al., 2009 - Protocadherin-19 is essential for early steps in brain morphogenesis
Other Figures
All Figure Page
Back to All Figure Page
Fig. 10

In vivo timelapse imaging reveals an arrest of convergence movements during neurulation in pcdh19 morphants. (A) Images extracted from a 6 hour timelapse sequence of transgenic embryos expressing a Histone H2A-GFP fusion protein. Each frame is a maximum intensity projection of 20 optical sections (spaced at 5 μm). Shown are three timepoints, at 3 hour intervals, revealing a net migration of cells toward the midline. By 3 h after the initiation of the timelapse, eye primordia have begun to form (red transparency), and the embryo has begun to narrow mediolaterally (blue transparency). Anterior is to the left; scale bar = 50 μm. (B) Images extracted from a 12 hour timelapse of transgenic embryos that have been injected with Mo-S1. In contrast to wild type embryos, cell movement toward the midline is arrested. (C) A kymograph from the 6 hour timelapse image sequence in A, showing the cell convergence. The increase in fluorescence intensity reflects an increase in cell density. The kymograph shows the intensity values measured along a line (11 pixel width, shown as a transparent purple bar in A) at each timepoint. (D) A kymograph from the timelapse image sequence in B, showing a failure of cell convergence. This data was assembled from a 12 hour timelapse sequence. Movement of cells toward the midline is disrupted in pcdh19 morphants, resulting in a lateral accumulation of cells. Compare red arrows in C and D.

Expression Data

Expression Detail
Antibody Labeling
Phenotype Data
Fish:
Knockdown Reagent:
Observed In:
Stage Range: 1-4 somites to 14-19 somites

Phenotype Detail
Acknowledgments
This image is the copyrighted work of the attributed author or publisher, and ZFIN has permission only to display this image to its users. Additional permissions should be obtained from the applicable author or publisher of the image.

Reprinted from Developmental Biology, 334(1), Emond, M.R., Biswas, S., and Jontes, J.D., Protocadherin-19 is essential for early steps in brain morphogenesis, 72-83, Copyright (2009) with permission from Elsevier. Full text @ Dev. Biol.