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      The effect of absent blood flow on the zebrafish cerebral and trunk vasculature

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          Abstract

          The role of blood flow in vascular development is complex and context-dependent. In this study, we quantify the effect of the lack of blood flow on embryonic vascular development on two vascular beds, namely the cerebral and trunk vasculature in zebrafish. We perform this by analysing vascular topology, endothelial cell (EC) number, EC distribution, apoptosis, and inflammatory response in animals with normal blood flow or absent blood flow. We find that absent blood flow reduced vascular area and EC number significantly in both examined vascular beds, but the effect is more severe in the cerebral vasculature, and severity increases over time. Absent blood flow leads to an increase in non-EC-specific apoptosis without increasing tissue inflammation, as quantified by cerebral immune cell numbers and nitric oxide. Similarly, while stereotypic vascular patterning in the trunk is maintained, intra-cerebral vessels show altered patterning, which is likely to be due to vessels failing to initiate effective fusion and anastomosis rather than sprouting or path-seeking. In conclusion, blood flow is essential for cellular survival in both the trunk and cerebral vasculature, but particularly intra-cerebral vessels are affected by the lack of blood flow, suggesting that responses to blood flow differ between these two vascular beds.

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            A Threshold Selection Method from Gray-Level Histograms

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              Stages of embryonic development of the zebrafish.

              We describe a series of stages for development of the embryo of the zebrafish, Danio (Brachydanio) rerio. We define seven broad periods of embryogenesis--the zygote, cleavage, blastula, gastrula, segmentation, pharyngula, and hatching periods. These divisions highlight the changing spectrum of major developmental processes that occur during the first 3 days after fertilization, and we review some of what is known about morphogenesis and other significant events that occur during each of the periods. Stages subdivide the periods. Stages are named, not numbered as in most other series, providing for flexibility and continued evolution of the staging series as we learn more about development in this species. The stages, and their names, are based on morphological features, generally readily identified by examination of the live embryo with the dissecting stereomicroscope. The descriptions also fully utilize the optical transparancy of the live embryo, which provides for visibility of even very deep structures when the embryo is examined with the compound microscope and Nomarski interference contrast illumination. Photomicrographs and composite camera lucida line drawings characterize the stages pictorially. Other figures chart the development of distinctive characters used as staging aid signposts.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Vasc Biol
                Vasc Biol
                vb
                Vascular Biology
                Bioscientifica Ltd (Bristol )
                2516-5658
                29 July 2021
                2021
                : 3
                : 1
                : 1-16
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Infection, Immunity and Cardiovascular Disease, University of Sheffield, Medical School, Sheffield , UK
                [2 ]The Bateson Centre , Firth Court, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield, UK
                [3 ]Insigneo Institute for in silico Medicine , Sheffield, UK
                [4 ]Institute of Ophthalmology , Faculty of Brain Sciences, University College London, London, UK
                Author notes
                Correspondence should be addressed to E Kugler: e.kugler@ 123456ucl.ac.uk
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2536-6140
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7458-5481
                Article
                VB-21-0009
                10.1530/VB-21-0009
                8428019
                34522840
                4425ec22-2e14-4a4e-b252-6f4f9804e9d9
                © 2021 The authors

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 20 May 2021
                : 29 July 2021
                Categories
                Research

                in vivo,light sheet,quantification,vasculature,zebrafish
                in vivo, light sheet, quantification, vasculature, zebrafish

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