Fig. 2
- ID
- ZDB-FIG-161212-4
- Publication
- Randlett et al., 2013 - Cellular requirements for building a retinal neuropil
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Simultaneous Removal of BC Partner Neurons (RGCs and ACs) Does Not Prevent BC Axons from Forming a Sublaminated Neuropil (A and B) Despite the loss of ACs, a phalloidin-rich IPL forms in the ptf1a−/−;ptf1aMO retina. (C) WT retina with the actin-rich IPL shown by phalloidin (arrow) and BC terminals labeled with vsx1:GFP. (D) Phalloidin staining demonstrates that in the AC/RGC-free retina (ath5−/−;ptf1a−/− ;ptf1aMO), the IPL is actin rich and positioned along the basal surface of the retina (arrow). (E) The thickness of the IPL was measured for each genotype at 5 dpf, demonstrating it is significantly thinner after AC removal (ptf1a−/−;ptf1aMOs), and thicker after RGC removal (ath5−/−). One-way ANOVA and Tukey post hoc tests; ∗∗p < 0.01; error bars ± 1 SEM. The number of retinas measured is given within the bars. (F) In the WT retina, Q16-labeled BCs stratify basally to Q19-labeled BCs in the IPL. (G) After the removal of many ACs and RGCs by ptf1aMO and ath5MO injections (G), the typical Q16-basal, Q19-apical pattern is apparent in many areas. (H) Inset in (F). (I) Inset in (G). (J) Line intensity profile measurements from 45 regions (three different retinas/animals) demonstrates the basal enrichment of Q16 signal and apical enrichment of Q19 signal in ath5;ptf1a morphants. Scale bars, 20 μm. See also Figures S2 and S3. |
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Stage Range: | Protruding-mouth to Day 4 |
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Observed In: | |
Stage Range: | Protruding-mouth to Day 5 |