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    Inhibition of Morphogenetic Movement duringXenopusGastrulation by Injected Sulfatase: Implications for Anteroposterior and Dorsoventral Axis Formation

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    AbstractIn order to explore the role of morphogenetic movement in the establishment of anteroposterior and dorsoventral axes, we sought to identify novelin vivoinhibitors of gastrulation movements inXenopus laevis.Injection of hydrolytic sulfatase into the blastocoels of gastrula stage embryos resulted in severe anteroposterior truncation, without a corresponding truncation of the dorsoventral axis. Confocal microscopy of whole embryos revealed that gastrulation movements are severely disrupted by sulfatase; in addition, sulfatase dramatically inhibited chordomesodermal cell elongation and convergent extension movements in planar dorsal marginal zone explants. The phenotype of anteroposterior reduction elicited by sulfatase is distinctly different from commonly generated dorsoanterior phenotypes (e.g., ultraviolet irradiation of the vegetal cortex prior to cortical rotation or suramin injection), and the two varieties of phenotype appear to result from inhibition of distinct, separable components of the axis-generating machinery
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