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Fig. 5. The role of individual Tudor domains for germ cell formation.
(A) Cellular blastoderm stage embryos from wild-type (wt), tud
mutant (A36, A7, B42 and tud1) and
tud1 females that express the mini-tud
3
transgene; anti-Vasa antibody marks germ cells. (B,C) In situ
experiments showing gcl (B) and pgc (C) RNA staining in wild
type and different tud mutant embryos generated by females
transheterozygous for the respective tud allele and
Df(2R)PurP133. For all panels, anterior is to the left and
dorsal is up.