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Specific Aim:
In this experiment, the
role of Shh as a survival factor in avian (chick) embryos
will be examined. We will
inhibit Shh with cyclopamine during specific stages of
development, and examine the corresponding patterns of cell
death in the tail bud.
Rational:
This investigation will
attempt to determine whether Shh acts as a survival factor
or a proliferation factor. To accomplish this, we will be
treating chick embryos with cyclopamine at 20 hours, thus
blocking Shh signaling, which has been shown to result in
tail bud malformations. A Propidium iodide stain specific
for dead cells will determine whether the malformations
occurred because of the lack of a survival factor,
increasing cell death, or a lack of cell proliferation. The
results of this experiment will tell us much about the
various roles of Shh during the early stages of chick
development. If increased cell death is seen, then Shh
signaling plays a role as a cell survival factor, the
inhibition of which causes increased apoptosis. If massive
cell death is not seen, then the cells of the tail bud did
not proliferate normally due to blocked Shh signaling,
causing malformations in later stages. The findings about
the role of Shh may have various implications for Shh
signaling and gene expression in other vertebrates including
mammals.
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