Lamprey snail highlights conserved and novel patterning roles in vertebrate embryos

被引:0
|
作者
Rod A. Rahimi
Jared J. Allmond
Hilary Wagner
David W. McCauley
James A. Langeland
机构
[1] Kalamazoo College,Department of Biology
[2] Mayo Clinic College of Medicine,Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
[3] University of Oklahoma,Department of Zoology
来源
关键词
Lamprey; Snail; Gene duplication; Neural crest; Mesoderm;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
snail genes mark presumptive mesoderm across bilaterian animals. In gnathostome vertebrates, snail genes are a multimember family that are also markers of premigratory neural crest (pnc) and some postmigratory neural crest derivatives in the pharyngeal arches. Previous studies of nonvertebrate chordates indicate that they have single snail genes that retain ancestral functions in mesoderm development and perhaps in specification of a pnc-like cell population. Lampreys are the most basal extant vertebrates, with well-defined developmental morphology. Here, we identify a single snail gene from the lamprey Petromyzon marinus that is the phylogenetic outgroup of all gnathostome snail genes. This single lamprey snail gene retains ancestral snail patterning domains present in nonvertebrate chordates. Lamprey snail is also expressed in tissues that are broadly equivalent to the combined sites of expression of all three gnathostome snail paralogy groups, excepting in embryonic tissues that are unique to gnathostomes. Importantly, while snail does not appear to demarcate an early neural crest population in lampreys as it does in gnathostomes, it may be involved in later neural crest development. Together, our results indicate that significant cis-regulatory innovation occurred in a single snail gene before the vertebrate radiation, and significant subfunctionalization occurred after snail gene duplications in the gnathostome lineages.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 36
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Lamprey snail highlights conserved and novel patterning roles in vertebrate embryos
    Rahimi, Rod A.
    Allmond, Jared J.
    Wagner, Hilary
    McCauley, David W.
    Langeland, James A.
    DEVELOPMENT GENES AND EVOLUTION, 2009, 219 (01) : 31 - 36
  • [2] Ectodermal patterning in vertebrate embryos
    Sasai, Y
    DeRobertis, EM
    DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 1997, 182 (01) : 5 - 20
  • [3] Conserved mechanisms in vertebrate A/P appendage patterning
    Dahn, Randall
    Davis, Marcus
    Shubin, Neil
    DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2006, 295 (01) : 391 - 392
  • [4] Abnormal axial patterning of lamprey embryos induced by all-trans retinoic acid: Morphological plan of the vertebrate body
    Kuratani, S
    Ueki, T
    Aizawa, S
    Hirano, S
    MOLECULAR BASIS OF AXON GROWTH AND NERVE PATTERN FORMATION, 1997, (20): : 13 - 24
  • [5] The metabolic gradients of vertebrate embryos II. The brook lamprey
    Hyman, LH
    JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, 1926, 42 (01): : 111 - 141
  • [6] Dorsoventral patterning of the vertebrate neural tube is conserved in a protochordate
    Corbo, JC
    Erives, A
    DiGregorio, A
    Chang, A
    Levine, M
    DEVELOPMENT, 1997, 124 (12): : 2335 - 2344
  • [7] Conserved and divergent mechanisms of patterning and regeneration in vertebrate appendages
    Dahn, Randall
    DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2009, 331 (02) : 453 - 454
  • [8] Evolution and developmental patterning of the vertebrate skeletal muscles: Perspectives from the lamprey
    Kusakabe, R
    Kuratani, S
    DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, 2005, 234 (04) : 824 - 834
  • [9] Oscillatory signals controlling mesoderm patterning in vertebrate embryos
    Aulehla, Alexander
    MECHANISMS OF DEVELOPMENT, 2017, 145 : S7 - S7
  • [10] Elucidating mechanisms of left-right patterning in vertebrate embryos
    Slagle, Christopher E.
    Burdine, Rebecca R.
    DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2008, 319 (02) : 517 - 517