Title of article
Knockdown of prothrombin in zebrafish
Author/Authors
Kenneth Day، نويسنده , , Naveen Krishnegowda، نويسنده , , Pudur Jagadeeswaran، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
8
From page
191
To page
198
Abstract
Thrombin is a serine protease generated from its zymogen, prothrombin, and plays a central role in the coagulation cascade. It is also important for mammalian development. The zebrafish has now been established as an excellent genetic model for studies on mammalian hemostasis and development. In this report, we used prothrombin-specific antisense morpholinos to knock down the levels of prothrombin to characterize the effects of prothrombin deficiency in the zebrafish embryo. Prothrombin morpholino-injected zebrafish embryos yielded an early phenotype exhibiting severe abnormalities that later showed occasional bleeding. In a second late phenotype, the embryos had no observable morphological abnormalities in early stages, but showed occasional bleeding at later stages. These phenotypes resembled characteristics shown by prothrombin knockout mice. Laser-induced vascular injury on some of the normal appearing phenotypic larvae showed a prolonged time to occlusion, and recombinant zebrafish prothrombin injected into these larvae restored a normal time to occlusion thus showing the specificity of the morpholino effect. The system developed here should be useful for investigation of the role of thrombin in vertebrate development.
Keywords
zebrafish , Prothrombin , Morpholino , Development
Journal title
Blood Cells, Molecules and Diseases
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Blood Cells, Molecules and Diseases
Record number
498720
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