Background Resources
| To
Lineage - How it was determined |
A
bit of history ( ):
(---- "but it sufficed to get us started in earnest on
the cell lineage. The significance was that although Sydney had
wanted from the beginning of the project to follow cell lineages,
it was presumed that the most interesting development happened in
the egg. So this was the only stage that had been studied, but it
was proving very difficult to see anything. It meant, however, that
there were already Nomarski DIC (differential interference contrast)
microscopes in the lab. ----Seeing my first cell division was an
exciting moment, because it implied that determining the larval
lineage was possible (Figure 4). (p. 2)" |
| Time spent: Dr. John Sulston spent one and a half
years (in the dark) to complete C. elegans cell lineage. |
Hand drawn: Dr. Sulston hand
drew the real time worm development. The C. elegans
embryo development wasn't recorded in video for lineaging, it
was all done by hand.
|
Microscopy used: Nomarski Optics (also known as
Differential Interference Contrast ( DIC)
microscope) was used. |
Image generated:
(About this image: an one-cell embryo with paternal and maternal
nuclei meeting in the center).
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More
information on the completion of C. elegans
cell lineage.
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References
1. Sulston, J. E., Schierenberg, E., White, J. G., &
Thomson, J. N., The embryonic cell lineage of the nematode Caenorhabditis
elegans, Developmental Biology 100, 64-119 (1983). Available
online: retrieved 12/10/04, from http://www.wormatlas.org/Sulstonemblin_1983/toc.html.
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