Fig. 2. Ossifications in the young wild-type (WT) zebrafish (A) and homozygous
edn1 mutant (B). Ventral views, anterior to the top, of negative
images of bones fluorescently labeled with Calcein in larvae at 7-days
postfertilization. Ventral bones of the pharyngeal arches are identified
(Cubbage and Mabee, 1996) by
their labels on the left side, and dorsal bones are labeled on the right side
in both panels, all of them are present as bilateral pairs. (A) The wild type
first or mandibular arch includes a dorsal and a ventral dermal bone, the
maxilla (max) and dentary (den), and a dorsal and a ventral
cartilage-replacement bone, the quadrate (qu) and retroarticular (ra). The
second or hyoid arch includes a dorsal and two ventral dermal bones, opercle
(op), and two branchiostegal rays (bsrp and bsrm), and
dorsal and ventral cartilage replacement bones (very incompletely ossified at
this stage), the hyomandibula (hm) and ceratohyal (ch). The most posterior
arch includes a cartilage-replacement bone, ceratobranchial 5 (cb5).
Overlaying ceratobranchial 5 is the cleithrum (cl), a long dermal bone
connecting the posterior skull and the pectoral girdle. Two other craniofacial
bones present at this stage lie deeper in the tissue and are not labeled, the
parasphenoid and the endopterygoid. (B) Many of the anterior ossifications (in
the first two arches) are missing in the edn1 mutant. Ceratobranchial
5 and the cleithrum are present, shortened and somewhat malformed. In the
mandibular arch dermal bones (max/den) are present but severely malformed, an
example of the `wicket' phenotype discussed in the text (see also
Fig. 3). In the hyoid arch the
opercle is present and its joint region (upper part of the bone) is markedly
expanded, a mild example of the `opercle-gain' phenotype described in the text
and other Figures. Scale bar: 100 µm.