FIGURE

Fig. 4

ID
ZDB-FIG-180702-3
Publication
Hocking et al., 2018 - Morphogenetic defects underlie Superior Coloboma, a newly identified closure disorder of the dorsal eye
Other Figures
All Figure Page
Back to All Figure Page
Fig. 4

The role of Gdf6a signaling in superior ocular sulcus morphogenesis.

(A) Delayed SOS closure caused by Gdf6a knockdown. Tg(rx3:GFP) zebrafish eyes (cyan) from uninjected and Gdf6a morpholino-injected embryos shown as DIC images of live embryos and single optical slices following anti-Laminin antibody staining (magenta). SOS marked by red asterisk. (B) Quantification of embryos with delayed sulcus closure, as assessed at 28 hpf. (C) Time series of maximum projection confocal images of a Tg(rx3:GFP) embryo injected with gdf6a morpholino. (D) DIC images of wildtype, gdf6a+/- and gdf6a-/- eyes (SOS marked by red asterisk). Bottom right panel shows SEM image of a Gdf6a-deficient eye with a pronounced sulcus. (E) Quantification of gdf6a-/- mutants (or siblings) with delayed SOS closure. (F) Adult wildtype zebrafish (top panel) showing normal eye morphology and a gdf6a-/- zebrafish (bottom panel) with superior coloboma (red arrow). N = 3 experiments for graphs in B and E. n = number of embryos. Data are means ± SEM. Statistics in B is a two-tailed t test, and in E is one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s test: **P<0.01, *** P<0.001. Scale bars are 50 μm.

Expression Data
Antibody:
Fish:
Knockdown Reagent:
Anatomical Terms:
Stage: Prim-5

Expression Detail
Antibody Labeling
Phenotype Data
Fish:
Knockdown Reagent:
Observed In:
Stage: Prim-5

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. Full text @ PLoS Genet.