Maternal factors and the evolution of developmental mode: Evolution of oogenesis in Heliocidaris erythrogramma

被引:0
|
作者
M. Byrne
Jeffrey T. Villinski
Paula Cisternas
Rebecca K. Siegel
Ellen Popodi
Rudolf A. Raff
机构
[1] Department of Anatomy and Histology,
[2] F13,undefined
[3] University of Sydney,undefined
[4] NSW 2006,undefined
[5] Australia,undefined
[6] Molecular Biology Institute and Department of Biology,undefined
[7] Indiana University,undefined
[8] Bloomington,undefined
[9] Indiana 47405,undefined
[10] USA,undefined
来源
关键词
Key words Echinoid; Oogenesis; Development; Evolution;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
 Evolutionary change in developmental mode in sea urchins is closely tied to an increase in maternal provisioning. We examined the oogenic modifications involved in production of a large egg by comparison of oogenesis in congeneric sea urchins with markedly different sized oocytes and divergent modes of development. Heliocidaris tuberculata has small eggs (95 µm diameter) and the ancestral mode of development through feeding larvae, whereas H. erythrogramma has large eggs (430 µm diameter) and highly modified non-feeding lecithotrophic larvae. Production of a large egg in H. erythrogramma involved both conserved and divergent mechanisms. The pattern and level of vitellogenin gene expression is similar in the two species. Vitellogenin processing is also similar with the gonads of both species incorporating yolk protein from coelomic and hemal stores into nutritive cells with subsequent transfer of this protein into yolk granules in the developing vitellogenic oocyte. Immunocytology of the eggs of both Heliocidaris species indicates they incorporate similar levels of yolk protein. However, H. erythrogramma has evolved a highly divergent second phase of oogenesis characterised by massive deposition of non-vitellogenic material including additional maternal protein and lipid. Maternal provisioning in H. erythrogramma exhibits recapitulation of the ancestral vitellogenic program followed by a novel oogenic phase with hypertrophy of the lipogenic program being a major contributor to the increase in egg size.
引用
收藏
页码:275 / 283
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Transcription factors in developmental genetics and the evolution of higher plants
    Lutova, L. A.
    Dodueva, I. E.
    Lebedeva, M. A.
    Tvorogova, V. E.
    RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF GENETICS, 2015, 51 (05) : 449 - 466
  • [22] Maternal immune factors and the evolution of secondary sexual characters
    Saino, Nicola
    Martinelli, Roberta
    Biard, Clotilde
    Gil, Diego
    Spottiswoode, Claire N.
    Rubolini, Diego
    Surai, Peter F.
    Moller, Anders P.
    BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 2007, 18 (03) : 513 - 520
  • [23] Maternal effects, developmental plasticity, and life history evolution - An amphibian model
    Kaplan, RH
    MATERNAL EFFECTS AS ADAPTATIONS, 1998, : 244 - 260
  • [24] Maternal effects and the evolution of brain size in birds: Overlooked developmental constraints
    Garamszegi, L. Z.
    Biard, C.
    Eens, M.
    Moller, A. P.
    Saino, N.
    Surai, P.
    NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS, 2007, 31 (04): : 498 - 515
  • [25] Adaptive evolution of bindin in the genus Heliocidaris is correlated with the shift to direct development
    Zigler, KS
    Raff, EC
    Popodi, E
    Raff, RA
    Lessios, HA
    EVOLUTION, 2003, 57 (10) : 2293 - 2302
  • [26] EVOLUTION OF NUCLEOLAR APPARATUS DURING OOGENESIS IN ACIPENSERIDAE
    RAIKOVA, EV
    JOURNAL OF EMBRYOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL MORPHOLOGY, 1976, 35 (JUN): : 667 - 687
  • [27] What is the promise of developmental evolution? III. The crucible of developmental evolution
    Wagner, GP
    Larsson, HCE
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL ZOOLOGY PART B-MOLECULAR AND DEVELOPMENTAL EVOLUTION, 2003, 300B (01) : 1 - 4
  • [28] LOW RATES OF BINDIN CODON EVOLUTION IN LECITHOTROPHIC HELIOCIDARIS SEA URCHINS
    Hart, Michael W.
    Popovic, Iva
    Emlet, Richard B.
    EVOLUTION, 2012, 66 (06) : 1709 - 1721
  • [29] Short and long germ segmentation: unanswered questions in the evolution of a developmental mode
    Liu, PZ
    Kaufman, TC
    EVOLUTION & DEVELOPMENT, 2005, 7 (06) : 629 - 646
  • [30] Evolution of a maternal immune activation (mIA) model in rats: Early developmental effects
    Murray, Katie N.
    Edye, Michelle E.
    Manca, Maurizio
    Vernon, Anthony C.
    Oladipo, Joanna M.
    Fasolino, Victoria
    Harte, Michael K.
    Mason, Varsha
    Grayson, Ben
    McHugh, Patrick C.
    Knuesel, Irene
    Prinssen, Eric P.
    Hager, Reinmar
    Neill, Joanna C.
    BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY, 2019, 75 : 48 - 59