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Fig. 9. Regulation of nk2.1b by gli2, yot/gli2, smu/smo and
dtr/gli1. (A) nk2.1b is normally expressed in the
anterior/ventral telencephalon (arrowhead) and in the diencephalon (bracket).
(B) gli2MO injection into wild-type embryos leads to a dorsal
expansion of telencephalic nk2.1b expression (arrowhead), as well as
an increase in expression in the hypothalamus (compare brackets). This
expansion was seen in 70/72 wild-type embryos injected with 10 ng of gli
2MO. (C) yot/embryos have reduced
nk2.1b expression in the diencephalon adjacent to the first ventricle
(arrow). (D) gli2 MO injection into
yot/embryos rescues the diencephalic
nk2.1b expression defect (compare arrows in C and D,
Table 2), and also leads to
expanded expression in the telencephalon (compare arrowheads). (E)
nk2.1b expression is extremely reduced in smu/smo mutants,
with small patches of expression remaining in the diencephalon and
telencephalon (arrowhead). (F) Injection of 10 ng of gli2 MO into
embryos from a cross of two smu+/parents resulted
in telencephalic nk2.1b expansion (arrowhead) in 89/89 embryos,
including 18 smu/embryos (20%) and 71
wild-type and heterozygous siblings (80%). This shows that Gli2 repression of
this Hh target gene is independent of Hh signaling. No nk2.1b
expansion was detected in 49/49 embryos injected with 10 ng of control MO. (G)
dtr/embryos have reduced nk2.1b
expression in the diencephalon adjacent to the first ventricle (arrow) similar
to the yot/gli2 phenotype. (H) gli2 MO injection does not
rescue diencephalic nk2.1b expression in dtr/gli1 mutants,
but does expand nk2.1b expression in the telencephalon (arrowhead).
Injection of 3-7 ng of gli2 MO resulted in telencephalic
nk2.1b expansion in 64/64 embryos, including 6 embryos (10%) that
were clearly homozygous dtr/mutants based on
diencephalic nk2.1b defects. The remaining 58 siblings (90%) also had
expanded telencephalic nk2.1b expression. All panels show 30-hour
embryos, lateral views of the forebrain, eyes removed, anterior to the left.
All panel pairs show sibling embryos from the same experiment. Dot shows the
optic recess, the anterior edge of the border between the diencephalon (di)
and telencephalon (te).