Depletion of Smad1 or Smad5 causes distinct embryonic phenotypes. (A) Embryos were either control (wild-type [wt]; row 1) or injected with 2 ng translation-blocking Smad1 MO (S1MO), which causes a phenotype first visible at the bud stage by elongation of the embryo (row 2). This phenotype is more severe starting around 18 hpf, with a ragged dorsal edge, neural degeneration, and a widened notochord (row 2; ). By 24 hpf, heart, brain, and endoderm defects are visible (
indicate neural degeneration and yolk stalk regression). These embryos go on to die at 3 to 4 dpf. Alternatively, embryos were injected with 1 ng translation-blocking Smad5 MO (S5MO), which causes a known dorsalization phenotype (row 3) similar to that of characterized smad5 mutants. This phenotype is first visible around the 5-somite stage with a tail defect (
) and a more caudal arrangement of somites. By the 18 hpf stage, the curvature of the tail is visible, and by 24 hpf, the lack of ventral tissues is evident (
). The Smad5 MO phenocopies the piggytail mutant (row 4). Each panel is a representative photograph of phenotype and stage shown. More than 200 embryos were observed for each panel. (B-E) Double knockdown of both Smad1 and Smad5 at half-dose causes lethality at 15 hpf. Shown are wt (B,D) and double-morphant (S1MO + S5MO) (C,E) embryos at 15 hpf and 24 hpf, as indicated. The phenotype just prior to death has combined features of each individual knockdown. Less than 1% of double morphant embryos survive to 24 hpf, as in panel E. Approximately 150 double-injected embryos were observed, and a representative is shown.