Fig. 1. Enlarged telencephalon and lack of retina in ne2611. All
views are lateral, anterior left. (A-B') Compared morphology of
ne2611 (B,B') and wild-type siblings (sib; A,A') at 36 hpf; views
with parasagittal and lateral focus, respectively. (A,B) Note the enlarged
telencephalon, delimited by a dashed line, in ne2611. Insets are
dorsal views of the same embryos showing absence of the retina (arrowheads)
and an expanded diencephalic ventricle (arrows) in ne2611. (A',B')
Note the maintenance of a lens (arrowhead) in ne2611, albeit smaller
than in wild-type siblings. Insets show expression of pitx3,
molecularly identifying the lens (arrowheads) in both genotypes. The adjacent
domain of pitx3 expression (small arrows) is hypothalamic, it is
displaced towards the lens in ne2611 due to the absence of eyes.
(C,D) Compared expression of the telencephalic marker emx3 at
the 15-somite stage in ne2611 (D) and wild-type siblings (C); scale
bar: 0.02 mm. The mutants display a massive anteroposterior enlargement of the
emx3 domain. (E-G) Relative anteroposterior sizes of the
anteriormost forebrain (domain A) versus prethalamus, thalamus, pretectum and
midbrain (domain B) at 15 somites in ne2611 (E) compared with
wild-type siblings (F). (G) Measurements are normalized to the size of the
anterior hindbrain (domain C), and the domains are defined with the genes
indicated in E. Bars indicate s.e.m. The difference in A/C length between wild
type and ne2611 is statistically significant (two-sample independent
Student's t-test, P values are given in the text).
(H,I) Schematic representation of the size of the different anterior
forebrain territories in wild type versus ne2611 siblings at 15
somites. The genes used as landmarks are color coded (yellow: arx
only, prethalamus; red: nkx2.1 only, anterior hypothalamus; orange:
arx+nkx2.1, posterior hypothalamus). Prethalamus and
posterior hypothalamus are unchanged in the mutants. The anterior hypothalamus
appears elongated, but might be simply stretched (hence the lighter red color)
by the anteroposterior enlargement of the telencephalon. Later, the anterior
hypothalamus appears reduced or missing (see also Fig. S1I,J in the
supplementary material).