abdominal neuroblast NB6-4 [FBbt_00001401]
Neuroblast NB6-4 found in an abdominal segment. It only generates glia (Schmid et al., 1999). It does not produce a secondary lineage (Lacin and Truman, 2016).
Neuroblast NB6-4 found in an abdominal segment. It only generates glia (Schmid et al., 1999). It does not produce a secondary lineage (Lacin and Truman, 2016).
Larval primary interneuron that develops from NB6-4 and projects contralaterally, via the posterior commissure (Bossing et al., 1996).
Larval primary interneuron that develops from NB6-4 and projects ipsilaterally (Bossing et al., 1996).
Primary interneuron that develops from neuroblast NB6-4. These neurons only exist in thoracic segments, as the abdominal NB6-4 neuroblasts only produce glial cells, and there are 4-6 of them per clone (Schmidt et al., 1997).
Cell body glial cell located in the ventral cell body rind of the embryonic/larval ventral nerve cord, lateral to the medial-most cell body glia. Its position varies between 20% and 80% along the mediolateral axis. It develops from the NB6-4 neuroblast (Beckervordersandforth et al., 2008).
Cell body glial cell that lies close to the midline of the embryonic/larval ventral nerve cord. It lies between 10-20% along the mediolateral axis, and at approximately 50% along the anterioposterior axis, and flanks the ventral unpaired median (VUM) neuron cluster on the midline. In the early larva, each thoracic hemineuromere has two medial-most cell body glial cells, whilst each abdominal hemineuromere has one (Ito et al., 1995). It develops from the NB6-4 neuroblast (Beckervordersandforth et al., 2008).
Neuroblast NB6-4 found in a thoracic segment. Its first division produces a daughter cell that generates only glia and a daughter cell that produces ganglion mother cells that give rise to neurons (Akiyama-Oda et al., 1999). It dies in late embryogenesis (Lacin and Truman, 2016).