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Fig. 2. Loss of Gliolectin perturbs commissure formation. BP102 staining of embryos from late stage 12 through late stage 13 (A,F, stage 12/1; B,G, stage early 13; C,H, stage mid 13; D,I, stage late 13; E,J, stage early 14) shows the progressive development of distinct, well separated commissures in wild type (OreR, A-E) and the effects of loss of Gliolectin in {Delta}3013 homozygotes (-/-, F-J). In OreR embryos at stage 12/1, commissural axons (A, arrowhead) are diffusely spread among the midline glia but by early stage 13 (B, arrowhead) commissural separation is becoming apparent. In {Delta}3013 homozygotes, however, the commissures are tightly fasciculated into a single bundle in late stage 12 and early stage 13 embryos (F,G, arrowhead) and remain poorly separated into mid-stage 13 (H, arrowhead). By mid-stage 13, wild-type commissures (C, arrowhead) have separated into anterior and posterior bundles and the longitudinal pathways (arrow) are evident within each segment. In {Delta}3013 homozygotes at mid-stage 13, the forming longitudinals possess less axon density than wild-type (compare arrows in C and H). Partial commissural fusions and distortions remain common in late-stage 13 and early-stage 14 deletion homozygotes (I,J, arrowheads). Scale bar: 11 µm.





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