| Literature DB >> 25059626 |
Christopher J Percival, Rebecca Green, Ralph Marcucio, Benedikt Hallgrímsson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Morphometric quantification of subtle craniofacial variation in studies of experimentally modified embryonic mice has proved valuable in determining the effects of developmental perturbations on craniofacial morphogenesis. The direct comparison of landmark coordinate data from embryos of many different mouse strains and mouse models can advance our understanding of the bases for craniofacial variation. We propose a standard set of craniofacial surface landmarks, for use with embryonic day (E) 10.5-12.5 mice, to serve as the foundation for this type of data compilation and analysis. We quantify the intra- and inter-observer landmark placement variation associated with each landmark and determine how the results of a simple ontogenetic analysis might be influenced by selection of landmark set.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25059626 PMCID: PMC4222779 DOI: 10.1186/1471-213X-14-31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Dev Biol ISSN: 1471-213X Impact factor: 1.978
Figure 1Surface craniofacial morphology of E10.5-E12.5 mouse embryos. Right lateral view of the surface craniofacial morphology of E10.5, E11.5, and E12.5 reference specimens in standard orientation, with definitions of the anatomical directions used in the landmark definitions. The location of landmark 9/26 (circle) is noted at the caudal-lateral end of the border between the lateral nasal prominence (dorsal of dashed line) and the maxillary prominence (ventral of dashed line).
Biological definitions of all landmarks and landmark subset categories
| The dorsal midline point between the growing forebrain and midbrain lobes. | Non-Facial | | |
| The dorso-rostral midline extent of the growing forebrain. | Non-Facial | Trouble | |
| The midline dorsal most extent of the face. | Nasal | | |
| Midline most rostral extent of the medial nasal processes. | Nasal | | |
| The ventral midline point on the primary palate, in the region that develops into the vermillion of the lip. | Nasal | | |
| The border between the medial nasal process and the forebrain, in line with the center of the body of the medial nasal process. | Nasal | | |
| Most dorsal extent of the rostral portion of the lateral nasal process, marking the original rostrolateral intersection of the lateral nasal process and the forbrain. | Nasal | Trouble | |
| The dorso-caudal most point of the lateral nasal process. | Non-Facial | | |
| The caudal most point of the intersection between the lateral nasal process and the maxillary process, representing the caudal end of the future nasolacrimal duct. | Nasal | | |
| The caudo lateral projection of the dorsal edge of the maxillary process. | Maxillary/Mandibular | Trouble | |
| Point at the nasal aperture representing the intersection of the lateral nasal process and the maxillary process. | Maxillary/Mandibular | | |
| The most rostro-ventral intersection between the medial nasal process and the maxillary process. Between E10.5 and E11.5, it shows the growth of the medial nasal process as a contributor to the labial margin. | Nasal | | |
| The rostro-caudal most extension of the lateral nasal prominence, illustrating the rostral growth of the lateral nasal process between E10.5 and E12.5. | Nasal | Trouble | |
| Point representing the middle of the medial side of the nasal aperture as a lateral extent of the medial nasal process. | Nasal | | |
| The dorsal most point of the nasal aperture representing the rostro-dorsal extreme of the border between the medial and lateral nasal processes. | Nasal | | |
| The corner of the developing mouth, found at the most caudo-lateral point on the rostral border of the maxillary and mandibular processes. | Maxillary/Mandibular | | |
| The lateral extent of the center of the maxillary process as it exists in E10.5 and E11.5. | Maxillary/Mandibular | Trouble | |
| The intersection of the buldge of the trigeminal ganglion and the pontine flexure of the developing brain. | Non-Facial | Trouble | |
| The medial, rostral, dorsal corner of the developing mandibular process. | Maxillary/Mandibular | | |
| The ventral caudal most point on the bulge of the growing forebrain, as noted from the lateral perspective. | Non-Facial | Trouble | |
| The most caudal midline point on back of the head, just ventral to the midbrain. | Non-Facial |
Simplified biological definitions for all landmarks as well as landmark subset definitions. Full biological and practical definitions are provided in Additional file 1. Definitions of anatomical directions used here are found in Figure 1. Identifications of these landmarks on specimens are found in Figure 2 and in Additional file 5.
Figure 2Landmarks defined on the craniofacial ectoderm. Landmark locations identified on the A) right lateral, B) dorsal, C) rostral, and D) rostro-ventral views of an E11.5 reference specimen, including the identification of the landmark subsets removed from ontogenetic regression analyses. Landmarks identified on 3D surfaces of all three ages are available in Additional file 5.
Figure 3Intraobserver landmark placement error. Intraobserver error of each landmark (LM) for each observer at E10.5 (A), E11.5 (B), and E12.5 (C), calculated as the euclidian distance between the landmark coordinates recorded in the two landmark placement trials. The calculations are combined for left and right versions of bilateral landmarks. The reference value of 0.1 mm discussed in the paper is shown as a dotted horizontal line. Observers 1, 2, and 3 are experienced with landmarking, while observer 4 is a first time landmarker.
Figure 4Interobserver landmark placement error. Interobserver error for each landmark (LM) at E10.5 (orange), E11.5 (blue), and E12.5 (red), calculated as the centroid size (CS) of the mean landmark coordinates of the three experienced landmarkers. Centroid size was calculated separately for the left and right side of bilateral landmarks.
Results of two-way ANOVA for association between relevant factors and landmark coordinate variation
| Specimen | 9 | 0.0406 | 8 | 0.0179 | 0.019 | 9 | 0.0340 | 0.1097 | |
| Landmark | 3 | 0.0282 | 3 | 0.0874 | 3 | 0.5048 | |||
| Observer | 35 | 0.5857 | 35 | 0.8070 | 35 | 3.1895 | |||
| Residual | 1392 | 1.0711 | 1249 | 1.2124 | 1392 | 3.2834 | |||
Two-way ANOVA results for the association between Specimen, Landmark, and Observer factors and variation in identified landmark coordinates for the three embryonic ages. Results include degrees of freedom (DF), sum of squares (Sum Sq), and p-value, which is highlighted in bold if highly significant (<.001). Variation in landmark coordinates were calculated as Euclidian distances between a given landmark location and the mean location across observers for the same specimen.
Figure 5Results of a regression of landmark coordinates on centroid size. The association between centroid size and a summary score of the landmark coefficients associated with a multiple multivariate regression of landmark coordinates on centroid size (Regression Score 1). This association is illustrated for regressions when all landmarks (LMs) were included (left) and when non-facial landmarks were removed (right), which represent the high end and low end of linearity for the regressions in our analyses.
Figure 6Comparison of ontogenetic shape change vectors for landmark subsets. Comparison of ontogenetic shape change vectors for regressions of landmark coordinates on centroid size for all landmarks (black), when nasal landmarks (LMs) were removed (blue), maxillary/mandibular removed (orange), and trouble landmarks removed (red). The vectors are based on the regression coefficients for each axis of a given landmark and all plotted relative to the mean procrustes coordinates of that landmark calculated when including all landmarks. The values of all axes are procrustes coordinates.