- news
- 16-04-2025

The editorial team of PLOS Biology selected one of LANE's light-sheet microscopy images as the cover of the March 2025 issue.
The morphological intricacies of avian feathers make them an ideal model for investigating embryonic patterning and morphogenesis. In particular, the sonic hedgehog (Shh) pathway is an important mediator of feather outgrowth and branching. However, functional in vivo evidence regarding its role during feather development remains limited. Cooper and Milinkovitch demonstrate that an intravenous injection of sonidegib, a potent Shh pathway inhibitor, at embryonic day 9 (E9) temporarily produces striped domains (instead of spots) of Shh expression in the skin, arrests morphogenesis, and results in unbranched and non-invaginated feather buds—akin to proto-feathers—in embryos until E14. Overall, they provide functional evidence for the role of the Shh pathway in mediating feather morphogenesis and confirm its role in the evolutionary emergence and diversification of feathers. The image shows the wing of a chick embryo at the twelfth day of incubation, with feather buds covering the entire embryonic wing.
Much additional information is available in the original article:
In vivo sonic hedgehog pathway antagonism temporarily results in ancestral proto-feather-like structures in the chicken
Rory L. Cooper, Michel C. Milinkovitch
PLoS Biol 23(3): e3003061. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003061