IMAGE

Figure 6

ID
ZDB-IMAGE-210822-15
Source
Figures for Holmgren et al., 2021
Image
Figure Caption

Figure 6

WT and mpv17a9/a9 neuromasts show loss of hair cells and afferent innervation following mechanical overstimulation. (A–F) Maximum-intensity projections of confocal images showing neuromasts with Parvalbumin-labeled hair cells (blue) and Ribeye b-labeled presynaptic ribbons (magenta). Neurod:GFP-labeled afferent neurites are also shown (green). Unexposed control neuromasts are shown in (A; WT) and (D; mpv17a9/a9); exposed neuromasts with normal morphology are shown in (B; WT) and (E; mpv17a9/a9); and exposed neuromasts with disrupted morphology are shown in (C; WT) and (F; mpv17a9/a9). Arrows indicate hair cells lacking afferent innervation. (G,H) Quantification of average hair cells per neuromast shows a trend of hair cell loss in exposed neuromasts (G), which is specific to disrupted neuromasts (H; **P = 0.0037). n = 32–66 fish (neuromasts L3, L4, and L5); N = 9 experimental trials. (I,J) The average percentage of hair cells with GFP-labeled contacts. We observed significant neurite retraction [I; **P = 0.0020 (WT); ***P = 0.0010 (mpv17a9/a9)], which is also specific to disrupted neuromasts only [J; **P = 0.0039 (WT); **P = 0.0020 (mpv17a9/a9)]. n = 15–30 fish (neuromasts L3, L4, and L5); N = 6 experimental trials. Scale bar: 5 μm. Error bars: SEM. “ns” = not significant.

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. Full text @ Front. Cell. Neurosci.