IMAGE

Fig. 1

ID
ZDB-IMAGE-071005-12
Genes
Source
Figures for Gleason et al., 2004
Image
Figure Caption

Fig. 1 Positional cloning of the acc gene. (A) Genetic (circle denotes centromeric end) and partial physical maps of the LG3 region containing the acc locus. EST fc25e04.x1 (2 recombinants/3458 meioses) and SNP34 (1 recombinant/2620 meioses) flank the critical interval. On BAC clone CH211-11K18, zero recombinant markers Z59609 and SNP3152 reside 4 and 3 kb, respectively, from serca. The relative distances between markers on the physical map correspond to the genetic map, and therefore are not scaled. (B) DNA sequence analysis of zebrafish serca cDNA reveals a C to T transition at position 2297 (denoted by asterisks in the partial chromatographs shown). The possession of both acc and wild type alleles in heterozygous fish is reflected in the existence of two overlapping peaks at this position. (C) The mutation predicts the substitution of a serine to a phenylalanine (in bold) at residue 766. Alignment of the protein sequences of SERCA in zebrafish, frog, chicken, rat, and human indicates that the mutation occurs in a highly conserved region (100% identity in the stretch of 40 amino acids shown). (D, E) Whole-mount in situ hybridization using antisense serca riboprobes. (D) Lateral view of stained wild type (top) and acc (bottom) fish at 4 days. (E) serca expression in fast skeletal muscle fibers in the tail of a 5-day wild type (top) and acc (bottom) fish, using confocal microscopy. Lateral view of a few segments of the tail. Anterior is left. Dorsal is top.

Figure Data
Acknowledgments
This image is the copyrighted work of the attributed author or publisher, and ZFIN has permission only to display this image to its users. Additional permissions should be obtained from the applicable author or publisher of the image.

Reprinted from Developmental Biology, 276(2), Gleason, M.R., Armisen, R., Verdecia, M.A., Sirotkin, H., Brehm, P., and Mandel, G., A mutation in serca underlies motility dysfunction in accordion zebrafish, 441-451, Copyright (2004) with permission from Elsevier. Full text @ Dev. Biol.