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Fig. 4. Abnormal migration of ENS progenitor cells in embryos homozygous for mutant alleles of Ret. (A-D) E9.5 wild-type (A) and Ret.k— (B) embryos and guts dissected from E10.5 wild-type (C) and miRet51 (D) embryos were hybridised as whole-mount preparations with a Sox10 cRNA probe. In E9.5 wild-type embryos (A), Sox10+ ENS progenitors were detected in the postbranchial region (black arrowhead) and in the foregut (white arrowhead). By contrast, in similar stage Ret.k— embryos (shown in B), no Sox10+ cells were present in the foregut despite the presence of such cells in the immediate postbranchial region (black arrowhead). At this stage, both wild-type and mutant embryos express high levels of Sox10 in cranial ganglia (cg) and in dorsal root ganglia (drg). In the gut of wild-type E10.5 embryos (C), the front of migrating Sox10+ cells (black arrow) has passed the midpoint of the midgut (halfway between the caudal region of the pancreas and the caecum). By contrast, in the gut of miRet51 homozygous embryos (D), the front of the migrating cells (black arrow) was located more rostrally, in the beginning of the midgut (black arrow). p, pancreas; ce, caecum; co, colon (hindgut).





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