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Fig. 5. Wingless signalling inhibits segmental boundary formation. All embryos are at stage 13+ and stained by immunocytochemistry with anti-Engrailed (black). (A-D) Removal of Wingless (while maintaining engrailed expression) leads to duplication of segment boundaries. An `en face' view of the ventral area (A) shows that engrailed stripes are sharply delineated on both sides. In a side view of the ventral region (B), one can see grooves on both sides of engrailed stripe (e.g. black arrows). In the lateral region, an `en face' view (C) shows that Engrailed stripes are broken up into clumps. (D) Grooves are generated around the islands of engrailed-positive cells as seen in a side view. (E-G) In a double mutant (wingless hedgehog), no groove forms. (E) Engrailed stripes are disrupted throughout (en face view of the ventral region as in A). (F) Ventral grooves are no longer generated, as seen in a side view as in B. (G) Likewise no groove can be recognised laterally in a side view similar to that in D. (H,I) Schematic drawings summarising the results shown in A-G.