Figure 6
Laminin Depletion Reduces Basal Protrusion Length and Spacing between Successively Differentiating Neurons
(A) Time-lapse sequence showing a differentiating neuron in a Laminin-depleted spinal cord (see
(B) Box-and-whisker plot showing the maximum length reached by basal protrusions in wild-type (mean ± SD, 42.6 ± 20.2 μm, n = 24 cells) and
(C) Histogram showing the distribution of the distance between successive Vsx1:GFP differentiation events in wild-type (orange) and
(D) Graph showing the proportion of successive Vsx1:GFP differentiation events that occur within a 42.6-μm interval (the average size of wild-type basal protrusions) in wild-type embryos,
Reprinted from Developmental Cell, 49, Hadjivasiliou, Z., Moore, R.E., McIntosh, R., Galea, G.L., Clarke, J.D.W., Alexandre, P., Basal Protrusions Mediate Spatiotemporal Patterns of Spinal Neuron Differentiation, 907-919.e10, Copyright (2019) with permission from Elsevier. Full text @ Dev. Cell