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FIG. 1. Diagrams show the routes of planar and vertical neural
inducing signals in whole embryos, shown in sagittal section,
dorsal to the left (A) and in explants (B). At the onset of gastrulation
(A, left), prior to involution of the headmesoderm/pharyngeal endoderm
(heavily shaded), only planar signals (arrow, A) pass from the
Organizer to the prospective neural ectoderm (shaded). Shortly after gastrulation
begins (A, right), the head mesoderm/pharyngeal endoderm
has involuted beneath the prospective neural ectoderm and
can provide vertical neural inducing signals (arrow). In sandwich
explants, only planar signals can pass from the Organizer to the prospective
neural ectoderm (B, left), unless the mesoderm is allowed to involute (B, right).
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FIG. 2. Diagrams show the method of making the standard ââKellerââ sandwich explant (A); the ââover the poleââ sandwich explant (B),
which includes ventral vegetal endoderm (cross-hatched); the ââgiant,ââ 3607 sandwich explant (C); and the ââpitaââ sandwich explant (D).
The dashed lines indicate the positions of cuts, shown in vegetal view of the embryo with dorsal at the top (top row) and in midsagittal
view, dorsal to the left (second row). See the text for a detailed, step-by-step description of the operations.
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FIG. 3. Homeobox amino acid sequence comparison between various members of the Hoxb-1-related genes, showing location of the
helical regions (I, II, and III underlined) and the variable amino acids (boxed), shows that the homeobox sequence we amplified in this
paper, designated here as X-B1, is most closely related to Hoxb-1 of mouse and chick and not the paralogs Hoxa-1 (Xhoxlab2) and Hoxd-
1 (Xhoxlab1, Xlab).
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FIG. 4. The normal pattern of expression of Hoxb-1 by whole-mount in situ hybridization. (A) At stage 14 Hoxb-1 is expressed in the
anterior lateral neural plate and folds (arrows). (B) At stage 16â17 expression is stronger and in the shape of a comma whose tail lies in
the prospective neural crest (arrow). Faint expression can also be seen posteriorly. (C) At stage 23 (bottom) and stage 27 (top) expression
in rhombomere 4 (arrows) and in the second branchial arch (arrowheads) can be seen. (D) By stage 27 expression is focused in rhombomere
4 (R4) and in the neural crest which has migrated into the second branchial arch (arrowhead). Note that Hoxb-1 is not expressed in the
floorplate or roofplate of the neural tube (arrow). (E) Hoxb-1 expression in rhombomere 4 (magenta) is located between Krox-20 expression
in rhombomeres 3 and 5 (blue). (F) Hoxb-1 is expressed autonomously in a neural plate isolated at stage 10.5. (G) Hoxb-1 is expressed
autonomously in a pita explant made at stage 10.5. N, notochord.
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FIG. 5. Light micrographs of external (A, E, I) and of internal (B, F, J) morphology, and corresponding cutaway diagrams of tissues and
movements (C, G, K) are correlated with in situ Hoxb-1 expression patterns in Keller sandwich explants (D, H, L). These are shown for
stage 100 (Aâ D), stage 10 (Eâ H), and stage 10/ (IâL) embryos. A, E, and I are exterior vegetal views of the forming bottle cells. In B, F,
and J the view is from the animal pole looking vegetally down onto the floor of the blastocoel with dorsal toward the tops of the pictures.
In C, G, and K the embryos are viewed from the right sides with dorsal to the left, the animal pole at the top, and the vegetal pole below.
The head mesoderm is indicated by stippling and the arrows indicate movements (F, forebrain; Bl, blastocoel; BC, bottle cells). In stage
100 and 10 sandwiches (D and H) only neural regions are present; the mesodermal regions of these sandwiches were broken off during
processing. An intact explant can be seen in the stage 10/ sandwiches (L) where the notochord expresses Hoxb-1 in addition to its
expression in the hindbrain region. About half of the explants made at stage 10 (5 of 11) showed the diffuse pattern, while about half (6
of 11) showed focusing of expression to a bar pattern in the approximate R4 region.
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FIG. 6. An SEM of a stage 10/ embryo in midsagittal fracture (A) shows the proximity of head mesoderm/pharyngeal endoderm (HM/
PE) to the overlying prospective neural ectoderm (NE) across the Cleft of Brachet (CB). The animal pole is at the top and vegetal pole is
at the bottom. The asterisk indicates the point of view for (B), looking down at the ledge of the blastocoel floor where the head mesoderm
(below) can be seen bridging the Cleft of Brachet and contacting the underside of the prospective neural ectoderm (above).
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FIG. 7. The design of the ââskewerââ experiment is shown, documenting the location of head mesoderm/pharyngeal endoderm contact
with overlying tissue across the Cleft of Brachet (A, B). The point of contact of the involuting tissue with the overlying tissue is marked
with a skewer as described in the text. Hoxb-1 is expressed in a ââcometââ pattern in an explant skewered in the involuting marginal zone
(arrow), cultured to stage 27 (C). Hoxb-1 is expressed in a ââbarââ pattern in an explant skewered in the anterior neural region (arrow),
cultured to stage 27 (D). Expression of Krox-20 (blue, arrowhead) lies anterior to the tail of the ââcometââ in the middle of Hoxb-1 (magenta)
expression in an explant skewered in the involuting marginal zone, cultured to stage 27 (E). Expression of Krox-20 (blue) lies posterior to
the Hoxb-1 (magenta) expression in an explant skewered in the anterior neural region (arrow), cultured to stage 27 (F). A and B are
reproduced from Keller and others (1996) with permission.
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FIG. 8. Hoxb-1 (b-1) and Krox-20 (kr-20) expression are shown in an explant with head mesoderm attached at the anterior end of the
mesodermal/endodermal axis (A, B). Persistent presence of head mesoderm, indicated by the expression of Hoxb-1, in a Keller sandwich
explant made at stage 100, is unable to focus the neural expression of Hoxb-1 (A). Krox-20 is expressed, although in an abnormal geometry
under these conditions (B). Hoxb-1 expression in ââover-the-poleââ explants made at stages 100 (C, left, diffuse) and 10/ (C, right, focused)
shows that the persistent presence of ventral tissue to stage 10.5 is unable to focus Hoxb-1 expression in explants made at stage 100.
The ventral vegetal endoderm of the over-the-pole explants was cut off at stage 10.5 and all explants were cultured to the same final
tailbud stage. Hoxb-1 expression in ââgiantââ explants made at stages 100 (D, left, diffuse) and 10/ (D, right, focused) shows that the
persistent presence of ventral and lateral tissue is unable to focus Hoxb-1 expression in explants made at stage 100. Overlapping of Hoxb-
1 (magenta) and Krox-20 (blue) expression in the neural region of a Keller sandwich explant shows that planar signals alone are unable to
refine pattern (E). A gap in Hoxb-1 expression (pointer, F) occurs between the concentrated bar above and diffuse expression below in the
hindbrain and spinal cord of Keller sandwich explants made at stage 10 (F). Tor 70 immunostaining for notochord (pointer, left explant
in G) shows the relation between proximity of notochord tissue and a split in the Hoxb-1 expression pattern, in contrast to the solid bar
expression pattern in an explant without notochord (right explant, G). Tor 70 immunostaining of Keller sandwich explants made at stage
10/ (H) shows the location of the notochord (N) in relation to Hoxb-1 expression (b-1). The notochord in the left explant is curled above,
not along the neural axis. Hoxb-1 is expressed in the notochord of Keller sandwich explants (I, pointer, bottom specimen) but only faintly
in the notochord of control embryos (I, top specimen).
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