Questions, Feedback & Help
Send us an email and we'll get back to you ASAP. Or you can read our Frequently Asked Questions.

WormBase Tree Display for Picture: WBPicture0000008986

expand all nodes | collapse all nodes | view schema

Name Class

WBPicture0000008986DescriptionFigure 1. GFP-BAF-1 protein expression. (A) Schematic view of the baf-1- gfp construct used for generating transgenic strains. It includes the baf-1 promoter driving the gfp gene fused to the baf-1 ORF followed by the baf-1 3' untranslated region. (B-D) A stronger GFP-BAF-1 signal was detected at the nuclear periphery, whereas weaker signals were detected in the nucleoplasm and cytoplasm. GFP-BAF-1 was detected in the gonad (arrowhead in B) in young embryos (arrows in B) and in late embryos (not depicted), in L1 larvae (C), and in adult worms (arrow in D points toward the vulva). (E and F) DIC, left; GFP fluorescence, right. Although GFP-BAF-1 was localized normally at the nuclear periphery of control embryos (L4440; E), it was mislocalized in lmn-1(RNAi) embryos (arrowheads in F), where the GFP-BAF-1 was also found associated with anaphase chromatin bridges (arrow in F). The image in B was obtained with a confocal microscope, whereas images in C-F were viewed with an Axioplan II microscope (Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.). Bars, 10 um.
NameF1.large.jpg
CropCrop_pictureWBPicture0000008987
AcknowledgmentTemplateWormBase thanks <Journal_URL> for permission to reproduce figures from this article. Reprinted from <Article_URL>. Copyright (<Publication_year>) with permission from <Publisher_URL>. The user must not use the Work for commercial purposes. If the user shares, alters, transforms, or builds upon the Work, the user may distribute the resulting work only under the same license the user received from <Publisher_URL>.
Publication_year2007
Article_URLDOIid10.1083/jcb.200704049
Journal_URLTheJournalofCellBiology
Publisher_URLTheRockefellerUniversityPress
ReferenceWBPaper00030942