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Published November 2011 | public
Journal Article

Live imaging of endogenous periodic tryptophan protein 2 gene homologue during zebrafish development

Abstract

Yeast Periodic tryptophan protein 2 gene (Pwp2) is involved in ribosome biogenesis and has been implicated in regulation of the cell cycle in yeast. Here, we report a zebrafish protein-trap line that produces fluorescently tagged Periodic tryptophan protein 2 gene homologue (Pwp2h) protein, which can be dynamically tracked in living fish at subcellular resolution. We identified both full-length zebrafish Pwp2h and a short variant. The expression results show that Pwp2h is present in numerous sites in the early developing embryo, but later is restricted to highly proliferative regions, including the forebrain ventricular zone and endoderm-derived organs in the early larval stage. At the subcellular level, Pwp2h protein appears to be localized to the region of the nucleolus consistent with its presumed function in ribosomal RNA synthesis. This Pwp2h protein trap line offers a powerful tool to study the link between ribosome biogenesis and cell cycle progression during vertebrate development.

Additional Information

© 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Accepted 30 August 2011. Published online 26 September 2011. We thank Ho-Yin Leung for performing 30 RACE and LeighAnn Fletcher for technical help in the Caltech Centers of Excellence in Genomic Science fish facility. This work is supported by USPHS P50HG004071.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023