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SUNY Upstate Medical university department of cell and molecular biology

From the research of Margaret M. Maimone, Ph.D

Fluorescent staining of a cross section of adult Xenopus skeletal muscle (top panels) and a whole mounted Xenopus tadpole tail (bottom panels). alpha-dystrobrevin staining (left panels) at the sarcolemma (arrowheads) and colocalized with acetylchlorine receptors (AChRs) (right panels) at the neuromuscular junctions (arrows)
Fluorescent staining of a cross section of adult Xenopus skeletal muscle (top panels) and a whole mounted Xenopus tadpole tail (bottom panels). alpha-dystrobrevin staining (left panels) at the sarcolemma (arrowheads) and colocalized with acetylchlorine receptors (AChRs) (right panels) at the neuromuscular junctions (arrows)

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