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Transplantation of the eye-forming region in the Axolotl neurula to assess cell specification and differentiation during late-stage gastrulation Anisha Chandra '06
Objective and Hypothesis The purpose of this study is to investigate the specification and determination of the cells in the eye-forming region of an Axolotl neurula. This will be done by transplanting this region into the flank of a host embryo of the same species. Isolated eye development in the flank region would indicate that the transplanted cells had already been determined as eye tissue when moved, whereas flank cell development in the graft would imply that the cells had not yet been specified as eye-forming. The eye-forming region of the Axolotl neurula is thought to undergo specification and determination during gastrulation, so this experiment should result in additional eye development on the flank of the host embryo (Gilbert, 2003). Background Amphibian embryos were traditionally favored by experimental embryologists because they were numerous, large, and easy to manipulate. They became less popular with the advent of developmental genetics, because they mature slowly and their chromosomes are often found in several copies (such as the tetraploidal Xenopus), which makes them harder to manipulate. Now, however, new molecular techniques have allowed a return to amphibian models (Gilbert, 2003). |
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