Friday, April 27, 2018

Development of Xenopus laevis

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Development of Xenopus laevis
History as a model organism

Scientists have used Xenopus laevis, an African clawed frog, to understand embryogenesis and development since the 1800s. Prior to the 1930s, researchers would go out in the spring during the breeding season, do as many experiments with the eggs as possible, and then analyze results for the rest of the year until the next spring.
However, in the 1930s, it was discovered that if urine from a pregnant woman was injected into a frog, a hormone called human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) would cause the frog to ovulate, even out of season. It wasn't long before this technique was used as a standard to detect pregnancy.



Tails have elongated slightly and pigmentation is more prominent.
(02/16/18)


While this was an effective human pregnancy test for a few decades, it was an eventually replaced by the immunoassays used today. However, hCG continues to be used to induce ovulation in Xenopus, allowing developmental biologists to conduct experiments year round. The female frog can stay alive, and fertilization can be induced many times.



View of a single tadpole.
Nostrils are developing more and stomach is more prominent.
(02/21/18)




The embryos now have the characteristic tadpole shape as their anterior end widens and posterior end elongates.
The developing stomach is visible.
Eyes are becoming more sophisticated in structure.
The heart is barely visible near the stomach.
Nostrils are visible.
(02/19/18)



Larval stage, with jelly coat still present.
(02/14/18)



Yolk has significantly reduce.
The tail has also elongated and the dark spots are eyes.
The cement gland is reddish in color.
(02/15/18)



Lone tadpole in a vertical orientation.
Groups of them would do this at a time, hanging from the surface of the water.
(02/16/18)

This ease of availability to eggs is just one reason that Xenopus is an ideal model for development. The eggs are large enough to see even the earliest stages of development, and because they are covered in a protective jelly instead of a shell, there is an unobstructed view of these processes. There is also a high level of translatability between the frog and human developmental genetics.



This series will explore the development of Xenopus laevis, by way of fertilization, cleavage, gastrulation, neurulation, organogenesis, and metamorphosis from tadpole to adult.

Xenopus Laevis Oocyte

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Xenopus Laevis Oocyte - X. laevis is also notable for its use in the first well-documented method of pregnancy testing when it was discovered that the urine from pregnant women induced X. laevis oocyte production. Human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) is a hormone found in substantial quantities in the urine of pregnant women. Today, commercially available HCG is injected into Xenopus males and females to induce mating behavior and to breed these frogs in captivity at any time of the year.

"Some [North American] hospitals [in the 1940s] dumped surplus frogs into nearby streams, where these prolific breeders flourished and are now considered pests."



Ovary under the microscope with many oocytes




Opened oocyte with nucleus


O’Connell et al. address a critical issue affecting many electrophysiologists who use Xenopus laevis oocytes for ion channel research: common infection by multi-drug–resistant bacteria. The researchers examine the effectiveness of 25 different antibiotics in treating the infections and establish an antibiotic cocktail protocol that maximizes oocyte quality.




More big winners from the Arizona Science and Engineering Fair earlier this month: Grand Prize Winner Aakash Jain ’14 presented his project “Optimization of the Xenopus laevis Oocyte Expression System.” He received a 1st PL award Cellular and Molecular Biology in addition to a special sward for In Vitro Biology Research. Aakash also took 3rd PL in a research poster contest at ASU. Aakash's Grand Prize award earns him a spot on ASU's SCENE team going to Intel's International Science & Engineering Fair.


African Clawed Frogs

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African Clawed Frogs
African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis) are an aquatic frog found throughout much of Sub-Saharan Africa (Nigeria and Sudan to South Africa). You can find them at reptile shows and are extremely hardy living up to 20 or even 30 years in captivity.

Up and until the 60's these frogs were used for pregnancy tests, exported all over the world for this use. The problem now is that labs released them into the wild when modern pregnancy tests became available. They carry a virus that kills other frogs outside of Africa.




A peculiar looking frog, that spends most of its life in the water. They can live just about in any type of aquatic environment, in clean water or not!







So strange... Like a small fish, the tadpole of Xenopus laevis, South-African clawed frog.
Fascinating creatures with their antennae and tail tips with which they maintain trim!









African Clawed Frogs also are known as Xenopus laevis caught at the Ysterklip farm dam. The Ysterclip farm dam is a clay dam with clear water which is the reason for their light, muddy skin colouration. Photo by A. de Villiers



Xenopus laevis is an important model organism for biology because scientists can induce egg laying. Originally, this was used in pregnancy tests. Urine from women would be injected into a frog and scientists would see if this induced egg laying, meaning the woman is pregnant. The chemical responsible for this is hCG and is still used today by scientists and in over the counter pregnancy tests.








African-clawed frog (Xenopus laevis) hiding underneath aquatic vegetation along the shallow edges of the Barcarena Stream, Oeiras, Portugal. Photo by F. Ihlow.



Xenopus laevis from a breeding population that has persisted at the Arthur Pack Golf Course in Tucson, Arizona, USA since the 1960s. Photo taken in 2015 by Jeff Dawson.





My favorite frog... They can make metallic clicking sounds, and both the males and females call underwater using these sounds. The Frogs of Southern Africa app has a recording of it




These frogs can definitely "sing". I used to keep them as pets in an aquarium as a kid and they made such a racket at night. My parents used to complain to me about it because the tank was situated right outside their bedroom window.

Albino African Clawed frogs You should get them to your Zoo

Albino African Clawed Frogs - Some people like furry, others like slimy! Here's Pinky and Floyd the Albino African Clawed frogs!




Net Cotton : Do these guys shed? I have a huge female and she is shedding? Is this normal? I just freaked a little!

InsureYourCompany.com: It is normal for them to shed. I think all amphibians shed their skin periodically. The male (left) just shed his skin last month and started croaking underwater.






Brett Thomas: My African Albino Clawed Frogs

Caitlin McWhirt: Those dudes got huge!



Annie Peppler Brooks: omgooooosshhhh!!!! looks like some1filled them up with AIR!!!!! D: HAHAHAHAAHAH

Brett Thomas: You should come see how ugly they are in person. they started out about as bid as a 50 cent piece! They have red eyes black claws ugly fat :)))))))!!!!!!!>....... funny LOL cause your reading this: DD

Gina Clough Fowler: OMG What the hell are they?



Brett Thomas: they are really Albino Frogs you should get them to your Zoo!LOL crazy huh!?
They actually eat feeder fish! and reptile fish food. If you look really close at the webbed feet you can see the claws! They are approximately 5-6 inches long now had them almost 3 years they were about as big as a quarter when we got them!

Lisa M Sorensen: These look like the offspring of Shreck and Fester.


Dawn Mason: My Albino African Clawed Frog (Froggy)



Brandi Hodgins: That is the ugliest thing I ever have seen! I am so afraid of frogs. I would rather have ten thousand snakes on me then one frog! Remember piggybacking me home bc of all the frogs on the road!
Glad you love him and got him tho, what's it's named?
Maybe we can do some exposure therapy and I can get rid of my fear lol



Priscilla DaCosta: I had 5 of those frogs and had to get rid of them because they carry crazy bacteria, no matter how much I cleaned the tank it seemed always dirty.

Dawn Mason: I remember, you and Guielle hated coming over the bridge after it rained...lol you chicken shits.
Yes, they do carry lots of bacteria, but just change the tank water more often and use a good water conditioner.  And he is not ugly he's cute lol


Thursday, April 26, 2018

Butterfly Pleco also known as Beaufortia leveretti

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Beaufortia leveretti also known as the butterfly pleco

Common Names: Butterfly algae eater, butterfly hillstream loach, butterfly loach, butterfly pleco, Chinese butterfly loach, Chinese sucker, hillstream loach, Hong Kong pleco, pleco loach, stingray loach, UFO pleco, etc.



Beaufortia leveretti (NICHOLS & POPE 1927)