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Fig. 1. Meox1;Meox2 mutants have profound axial skeleton defects. Alcian
Blue/Alizarin Red skeletal preparations of neonates. The forelimbs and
shoulder girdle have been removed for ease of viewing. In contrast to control
littermates (Meox1+/-;Meox2+/- A and
E, n>6), animals with mutations in both Meox1 and
Meox2 genes have defects in the development of the axial skeleton
(B-H, n>6).
Meox1-/-;Meox2+/- display rib fusions
and deformations, and vertebral bodies at the lumbar level are split, and tail
vertebrae are fused (B,F).
Meox1+/-;Meox2-/- are less severely
affected, there are no rib defects and lumbar vertebrae appear normal, but
tail vertebrae are malformed and fused (C,G).
Meox1-/-;Meox2-/- animals lack an
axial skeleton (D,H), there are no ribs and, while ossified, deformed
vertebrae are formed at the cervical and thoracic level; more posterior lumbar
vertebrae are present only as cartilage condensations at the position expected
of the neural arches (arrow in H) and tail vertebrae are completely absent.
The sternum develops, albeit abnormally, in the absence of the ribs (arrowhead
in D). Normally developed neural arches (na) and vertebral bodies (vb) are
identified in E.