spacer gif spacer gif spacer gif spacer gif spacer gif
 QUICK SEARCH:   [advanced]


spacer gif
     Home     Help     Feedback     Subscriptions     Archive     Search     Table of Contents    


Right arrow Help viewing high resolution images
Right arrow Return to article
(Downloading may take up to 30 seconds.
If the slide opens in your browser, select File -> Save As to save it.)

Click on image to view larger version.



Fig. 2. A Rarg-null mutant background rescues the Cyp26a1-null mutant caudal phenotype. In comparison to a wild-type littermate (A, left), two 10-day-old A1-/-{gamma}-/- double mutants (A, right) show kinked and/or shortened tails. Compared with a wild-type skeleton (B) at E18.5, an A1-/-{gamma}-/- (C) skeleton reveals that the tail vertebrae have a normal morphology, although tail development is reduced by approximately four vertebral condensations. The wild-type skeleton (D) exhibits six lumbar (L1-L6; L1 not shown), three fused sacral (S1-S3) and caudal tail (tl) vertebrae. The ilium (il) articulates with S1 and the pelvic bone (pb), which articulates with the hindlimbs. While the skeleton of the A1-/-{gamma}-/- mutant (E) is comparable with that of the wild-type animal, the A1-/- (F) and A1-/-{gamma}+/- (G) mutants develop abnormally; both skeletons show deformed and abnormally fused lumbar vertebrae (L*), with the A1-/- mutant being more severely affected. Furthermore, in the A1-/-{gamma}+/- mutant, the malformed pelvic bone (pb*) is connected to abnormally twisted hindlimbs and only six rudimentary caudal vertebrae contribute to the tail (tl*). The A1-/- mutant exhibits a similarly deformed pelvic bone and twisted hindlimbs, as well as a more severe caudal truncation (ct), developing only three sacral rudiments.





Right arrow Return to article