Zebrafish sall1a and sall4 contribute to body elongation.

斑马鱼 sall1a 和 sall4 有助于身体伸长

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作者:Kawakami Hiroko, Bailey Abigail, Gavin Ella, Gearhart Micah D, Isabella Adam J, Kawakami Yasuhiko
Vertebrate embryos elongate the body after gastrulation. Unlike in mice, which elongate both the trunk and tail after gastrulation, zebrafish embryos complete development of the trunk by the end of gastrulation, followed by tail elongation by proliferation of posteriorly located progenitors. Previous studies have shown that the transcription factors SALL1 and SALL4 redundantly regulate tail elongation in mouse embryos. To test whether sall1a and sall4 also regulate tail elongation in zebrafish, we generated zebrafish mutants for these genes. By 24 h post-fertilization, sall4 mutant embryos developed normally but exhibited changes in gene expression at the posterior end of the body. sall1a mutants also developed normally by 24 h post-fertilization. However, embryos mutant for both sall1a and sall4 showed a slight but significant reduction in body length compared to wild-type embryos. Our results support a role for sall1a and sall4 in tail elongation in zebrafish, though their contribution appears smaller than that observed in mouse embryos.

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