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1.
Neural Dev ; 19(1): 11, 2024 Jun 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38909268

ABSTRACT

The complex morphology of neurons requires precise control of their microtubule cytoskeleton. This is achieved by microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) that regulate the assembly and stability of microtubules, and transport of molecules and vesicles along them. While many of these MAPs function in all cells, some are specifically or predominantly involved in regulating microtubules in neurons. Here we use the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis as a model organism to provide new insights into the early evolution of neural microtubule regulation. As a cnidarian, Nematostella belongs to an outgroup to all bilaterians and thus occupies an informative phylogenetic position for reconstructing the evolution of nervous system development. We identified an ortholog of the microtubule-binding protein doublecortin-like kinase (NvDclk1) as a gene that is predominantly expressed in neurons and cnidocytes (stinging cells), two classes of cells belonging to the neural lineage in cnidarians. A transgenic NvDclk1 reporter line revealed an elaborate network of neurite-like processes emerging from cnidocytes in the tentacles and the body column. A transgene expressing NvDclk1 under the control of the NvDclk1 promoter suggests that NvDclk1 localizes to microtubules and therefore likely functions as a microtubule-binding protein. Further, we generated a mutant for NvDclk1 using CRISPR/Cas9 and show that the mutants fail to generate mature cnidocytes. Our results support the hypothesis that the elaboration of programs for microtubule regulation occurred early in the evolution of nervous systems.


Subject(s)
Doublecortin-Like Kinases , Neurons , Sea Anemones , Animals , Sea Anemones/embryology , Sea Anemones/cytology , Sea Anemones/genetics , Neurons/metabolism , Neurons/cytology , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , Microtubules/metabolism , Neurogenesis/physiology , Animals, Genetically Modified , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/metabolism , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/genetics
2.
PeerJ ; 10: e13361, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35607447

ABSTRACT

Background: Aurelia aurita (Scyphozoa, Cnidaria) is an emblematic species of the jellyfish. Currently, it is an emerging model of Evo-Devo for studying evolution and molecular regulation of metazoans' complex life cycle, early development, and cell differentiation. For Aurelia, the genome was sequenced, the molecular cascades involved in the life cycle transitions were characterized, and embryogenesis was studied on the level of gross morphology. As a reliable representative of the class Scyphozoa, Aurelia can be used for comparative analysis of embryonic development within Cnidaria and between Cnidaria and Bilateria. One of the intriguing questions that can be posed is whether the invagination occurring during gastrulation of different cnidarians relies on the same cellular mechanisms. To answer this question, a detailed study of the cellular mechanisms underlying the early development of Aurelia is required. Methods: We studied the embryogenesis of A. aurita using the modern methods of light microscopy, immunocytochemistry, confocal laser microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Results: In this article, we report a comprehensive study of the early development of A. aurita from the White Sea population. We described in detail the embryonic development of A. aurita from early cleavage up to the planula larva. We focused mainly on the cell morphogenetic movements underlying gastrulation. The dynamics of cell shape changes and cell behavior during invagination of the archenteron (future endoderm) were characterized. That allowed comparing the gastrulation by invagination in two cnidarian species-scyphozoan A. aurita and anthozoan Nematostella vectensis. We described the successive stages of blastopore closure and found that segregation of the germ layers in A. aurita is linked to the 'healing' of the blastopore lip. We followed the developmental origin of the planula body parts and characterized the planula cells' ultrastructure. We also found that the planula endoderm consists of three morphologically distinct compartments along the oral-aboral axis. Conclusions: Epithelial invagination is a fundamental morphogenetic movement that is believed as highly conserved across metazoans. Our data on the cell shaping and behaviours driving invagination in A. aurita contribute to understanding of morphologically similar morphogenesis in different animals. By comparative analysis, we clearly show that invagination may differ at the cellular level between cnidarian species belonging to different classes (Anthozoa and Scyphozoa). The number of cells involved in invagination, the dynamics of the shape of the archenteron cells, the stage of epithelial-mesenchymal transition that these cells can reach, and the fate of blastopore lip cells may vary greatly between species. These results help to gain insight into the evolution of morphogenesis within the Cnidaria and within Metazoa in general.


Subject(s)
Scyphozoa , Sea Anemones , Animals , Scyphozoa/genetics , Life Cycle Stages/physiology , Embryonic Development/genetics , Gastrulation
3.
Dev Dyn ; 251(5): 795-825, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34787911

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In almost all metazoans examined to this respect, the axial patterning system based on canonical Wnt (cWnt) signaling operates throughout the course of development. In most metazoans, gastrulation is polar, and embryos develop morphological landmarks of axial polarity, such as blastopore under control/regulation from cWnt signaling. However, in many cnidarian species, gastrulation is morphologically apolar. The question remains whether сWnt signaling providing the establishment of a body axis controls morphogenetic processes involved in apolar gastrulation. RESULTS: In this study, we focused on the embryonic development of Dynamena pumila, a cnidarian species with apolar gastrulation. We thoroughly described cell behavior, proliferation, and ultrastructure and examined axial patterning in the embryos of this species. We revealed that the first signs of morphological polarity appear only after the end of gastrulation, while molecular prepatterning of the embryo does exist during gastrulation. We have shown experimentally that in D. pumila, the direction of the oral-aboral axis is highly robust against perturbations in cWnt activity. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that morphogenetic processes are uncoupled from molecular axial patterning during gastrulation in D. pumila. Investigation of D. pumila might significantly expand our understanding of the ways in which morphological polarization and axial molecular patterning are linked in Metazoa.


Subject(s)
Cnidaria , Gastrula , Animals , Body Patterning/physiology , Cnidaria/genetics , Gastrulation , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Larva , Wnt Signaling Pathway/physiology
4.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 4032, 2021 06 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34188050

ABSTRACT

In animals, body axis patterning is based on the concentration-dependent interpretation of graded morphogen signals, which enables correct positioning of the anatomical structures. The most ancient axis patterning system acting across animal phyla relies on ß-catenin signaling, which directs gastrulation, and patterns the main body axis. However, within Bilateria, the patterning logic varies significantly between protostomes and deuterostomes. To deduce the ancestral principles of ß-catenin-dependent axial patterning, we investigate the oral-aboral axis patterning in the sea anemone Nematostella-a member of the bilaterian sister group Cnidaria. Here we elucidate the regulatory logic by which more orally expressed ß-catenin targets repress more aborally expressed ß-catenin targets, and progressively restrict the initially global, maternally provided aboral identity. Similar regulatory logic of ß-catenin-dependent patterning in Nematostella and deuterostomes suggests a common evolutionary origin of these processes and the equivalence of the cnidarian oral-aboral and the bilaterian posterior-anterior body axes.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/physiology , Sea Anemones/embryology , Sea Urchins/embryology , beta Catenin/metabolism , Animals , Body Patterning/genetics , Gastrulation/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/genetics , Sea Anemones/anatomy & histology , Sea Urchins/anatomy & histology , Signal Transduction , Wnt1 Protein/genetics , Wnt2 Protein/genetics , beta Catenin/genetics
5.
Dev Biol ; 468(1-2): 59-79, 2020 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32976840

ABSTRACT

The cnidarian "planula" larva shows radial symmetry around a polarized, oral-aboral, body axis and comprises two epithelia cell layers, ectodermal and endodermal. This simple body plan is set up during gastrulation, a process which proceeds by a variety of modes amongst the diverse cnidarian species. In the hydrozoan laboratory model Clytia hemisphaerica, gastrulation involves a process termed unipolar cell ingression, in which the endoderm derives from mass ingression of individual cells via a process of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) around the future oral pole of an epithelial embryo. This contrasts markedly from the gastrulation mode in the anthozoan cnidarian Nematostella vectensis, in which endoderm formation primarily relies on cell sheet invagination. To understand the cellular basis of gastrulation in Clytia we have characterized in detail successive cell morphology changes during planula formation by Scanning and Transmission Electron Microscopy combined with confocal imaging. These changes successively accompany epithelialization of the blastoderm, EMT occurring in the oral domain through the bottle cell formation and ingression, cohesive migration and intercalation of ingressed cells with mesenchymal morphology, and their epithelialization to form the endoderm. From our data, we have reconstructed the cascade of morphogenetic events leading to the formation of planula larva. We also matched the domains of cell morphology changes to the expression of selected regulatory and marker genes expressed during gastrulation. We propose that cell ingression in Clytia not only provides the endoderm, but generates internal forces that shape the embryo in the course of gastrulation. These observations help build a more complete understanding of the cellular basis of morphogenesis and of the evolutionary plasticity of cnidarian gastrulation modes.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/physiology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/embryology , Hydrozoa/embryology , Animals , Larva
6.
Dev Biol ; 460(2): 176-186, 2020 04 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31904373

ABSTRACT

In Cnidaria, modes of gastrulation to produce the two body layers vary greatly between species. In the hydrozoan species Clytia hemisphaerica gastrulation involves unipolar ingression of presumptive endoderm cells from an oral domain of the blastula, followed by migration of these cells to fill the blastocoel with concomitant narrowing of the gastrula and elongation along the oral-aboral axis. We developed a 2D computational boundary model capable of simulating the morphogenetic changes during embryonic development from early blastula stage to the end of gastrulation. Cells are modeled as polygons with elastic membranes and cytoplasm, colliding and adhering to other cells, and capable of forming filopodia. With this model we could simulate compaction of the embryo preceding gastrulation, bottle cell formation, ingression, and intercalation between cells of the ingressing presumptive endoderm. We show that embryo elongation is dependent on the number of endodermal cells, low endodermal cell-cell adhesion, and planar cell polarity (PCP). When the strength of PCP is reduced in our model, resultant embryo morphologies closely resemble those reported previously following morpholino-mediated knockdown of the core PCP proteins Strabismus and Frizzled. Based on our results, we postulate that cellular processes of apical constriction, compaction, ingression, and then reduced cell-cell adhesion and mediolateral intercalation in the presumptive endoderm, are required and when combined, sufficient for Clytia gastrulation.


Subject(s)
Cnidaria/embryology , Gastrula/embryology , Gastrulation/physiology , Models, Biological , Animals , Cnidaria/cytology , Gastrula/cytology
7.
Development ; 146(20)2019 10 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31540916

ABSTRACT

Morphogenesis is a shape-building process during development of multicellular organisms. During this process, the establishment and modulation of cell-cell contacts play an important role. Cadherins, the major cell adhesion molecules, form adherens junctions connecting epithelial cells. Numerous studies of Bilateria have shown that cadherins are associated with the regulation of cell differentiation, cell shape changes, cell migration and tissue morphogenesis. To date, the role of cadherins in non-bilaterians is unknown. Here, we study the expression and function of two paralogous classical cadherins, Cadherin 1 and Cadherin 3, in a diploblastic animal, the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis We show that a cadherin switch accompanies the formation of germ layers. Using specific antibodies, we show that both cadherins are localized to adherens junctions at apical and basal positions in ectoderm and endoderm. During gastrulation, partial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition of endodermal cells is marked by stepwise downregulation of Cadherin 3 and upregulation of Cadherin 1. Knockdown experiments show that both cadherins are required for maintenance of tissue integrity and tissue morphogenesis. Thus, both sea anemones and bilaterians use independently duplicated cadherins combinatorially for tissue morphogenesis and germ layer differentiation.


Subject(s)
Cadherins/metabolism , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism , Germ Layers/cytology , Germ Layers/metabolism , Sea Anemones/embryology , Sea Anemones/metabolism , Animals , Ectoderm/cytology , Ectoderm/metabolism , Endoderm/cytology , Endoderm/metabolism
8.
Dev Biol ; 456(2): 145-153, 2019 12 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31473187

ABSTRACT

At the polyp stage, most hydrozoan cnidarians form highly elaborate colonies with a variety of branching patterns, which makes them excellent models for studying the evolutionary mechanisms of body plan diversification. At the same time, molecular mechanisms underlying the robust patterning of the architecturally complex hydrozoan colonies remain unexplored. Using non-model hydrozoan Dynamena pumila we showed that the key components of the Wnt/ß-catenin (cWnt) pathway (ß-catenin, TCF) and the cWnt-responsive gene, brachyury 2, are involved in specification and patterning of the developing colony shoots. Strikingly, pharmacological modulation of the cWnt pathway leads to radical modification of the monopodially branching colony of Dynamena which acquire branching patterns typical for colonies of other hydrozoan species. Our results suggest that modulation of the cWnt signaling is the driving force promoting the evolution of the vast variety of the body plans in hydrozoan colonies and offer an intriguing possibility that the involvement of the cWnt pathway in the regulation of branching morphogenesis might represent an ancestral feature predating the cnidarian-bilaterian split.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/physiology , Hydrozoa/metabolism , Wnt Signaling Pathway/physiology , Animals , Body Patterning/genetics , Cnidaria/genetics , Cnidaria/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Fetal Proteins/genetics , Fetal Proteins/metabolism , Hydrozoa/genetics , Morphogenesis , Phylogeny , Signal Transduction , T-Box Domain Proteins/genetics , T-Box Domain Proteins/metabolism , Wnt Proteins/metabolism , Wnt Signaling Pathway/genetics
9.
Biosystems ; 173: 157-164, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30248369

ABSTRACT

Epithelial folding (EF) is a fundamental morphogenetic process that can be observed in the development of many organisms ranging from metazoans to green algae. Being early branching metazoans, cnidarians represent the best models to study evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic processes, including EF. Hydrozoa is the most evolutionary advanced group of the phylum Cnidaria. All colonial hydrozoans grow continuously, changing the shape of their colonies and spreading over the substrate with the help of elongating stolons. Owing to high diversity of colony architecture, they are ideal objects for comparative and evolutionary morphology. In the hydrozoan Dynamena pumila, the growth of the colony proceeds via a variety of morphogenetic processes. Our work is focused on the formation of the anchoring disc of the stolon, which is accompanied by inward-folding morphogenesis of the ectodermal layer. Successive stages of anchoring disc development were described with light, confocal transmission electron microscopy. We have shown that EF in Dynamena is associated with accumulation of F-actin in the constricting apical domains of forming bottle cells located at the bottom of the emerging fold. In addition, the nuclei of these cells are displaced to the basal domains. Taken together, these features may indicate that EF in Dynamena proceeds as an active invagination, although this process has never been described in the development of hydrozoans. Apparently, development of the anchoring disc can be viewed as a reliable and versatile model system for studying the cell-shape-change-driven epithelial sheet morphogenesis, which can be easily observed and analysed.


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Cnidaria/growth & development , Epithelium/growth & development , Animals , Cell Proliferation , Cell Shape , Cnidaria/cytology , Microscopy, Confocal , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Morphogenesis , Stress, Mechanical
10.
Dev Growth Differ ; 60(8): 483-501, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30259509

ABSTRACT

Progress of Evo-Devo requires broad phylogenetic sampling providing the data for comparative analysis as well as new objects suitable for experimental investigation. Representatives of the early-branching animal phylum Cnidaria and particularly hydrozoans draw great attention due to the high diversity of embryonic and post-embryonic development and life-cycles in general. Most detailed studies on embryonic development in hydrozoans were performed on the species shedding their gametes with subsequent embryo development in the water column. Widely distributed thecate hydrozoan Gonothyraea loveni broods its embryos within reduced medusae attached to the colony until development of a free-swimming metamorphosis competent planula-larva. In the current essay we present a detailed description of G. loveni embryonic development based on in vivo observations, histology, immuno-cytochemistry, and electron microscopy. Starting from early cleavage, the embryo becomes a morula without any sign of blastocoele. Gastrulation proceeds as mixed delamination and ends with parenchymula formation. The first morphological sign of primary body axis appears only in the beginning of parenchymula-preplanula transition. In mature metamorphosis competent planula only the cells of the oral two-thirds of endoderm retain proliferative activity resulting in accumulation of great number of i-cells and nematoblasts, which can be used during metamorphosis accompanied with essential reorganization of larval tissues. G. loveni demonstrates the diversity as well as evolutionary plasticity of hydrozoans development: in brooding hydrozoans embryonic and larval development is highly embryonized in comparison with the spawning species with free-swimming embryos.


Subject(s)
Hydrozoa/embryology , Animals , Hydrozoa/cytology , Hydrozoa/growth & development , Larva/growth & development
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(8): 1813-1818, 2018 02 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29440382

ABSTRACT

Robust morphogenetic events are pivotal for animal embryogenesis. However, comparison of the modes of development of different members of a phylum suggests that the spectrum of developmental trajectories accessible for a species might be far broader than can be concluded from the observation of normal development. Here, by using a combination of microsurgery and transgenic reporter gene expression, we show that, facing a new developmental context, the aggregates of dissociated embryonic cells of the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis take an alternative developmental trajectory. The self-organizing aggregates rely on Wnt signals produced by the cells of the original blastopore lip organizer to form body axes but employ morphogenetic events typical for normal development of distantly related cnidarians to re-establish the germ layers. The reaggregated cells show enormous plasticity including the capacity of the ectodermal cells to convert into endoderm. Our results suggest that new developmental trajectories may evolve relatively easily when highly plastic embryonic cells face new constraints.


Subject(s)
Germ Layers/cytology , Sea Anemones/embryology , Animals , Biological Evolution , Cell Aggregation , Ectoderm/cytology , Ectoderm/embryology , Ectoderm/metabolism , Embryonic Development , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Germ Layers/embryology , Germ Layers/metabolism , Sea Anemones/cytology , Sea Anemones/genetics , Sea Anemones/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Wnt Proteins/genetics , Wnt Proteins/metabolism
12.
Nat Commun ; 7: 11694, 2016 05 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27229764

ABSTRACT

The startling capacity of the amphibian Spemann organizer to induce naïve cells to form a Siamese twin embryo with a second set of body axes is one of the hallmarks of developmental biology. However, the axis-inducing potential of the blastopore-associated tissue is commonly regarded as a chordate feature. Here we show that the blastopore lip of a non-bilaterian metazoan, the anthozoan cnidarian Nematostella vectensis, possesses the same capacity and uses the same molecular mechanism for inducing extra axes as chordates: Wnt/ß-catenin signaling. We also demonstrate that the establishment of the secondary, directive axis in Nematostella by BMP signaling is sensitive to an initial Wnt signal, but once established the directive axis becomes Wnt-independent. By combining molecular analysis with experimental embryology, we provide evidence that the emergence of the Wnt/ß-catenin driven blastopore-associated axial organizer predated the cnidarian-bilaterian split over 600 million years ago.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/genetics , Gastrula/metabolism , Organizers, Embryonic/metabolism , Sea Anemones/genetics , Animals , Base Sequence , CRISPR-Cas Systems , Gastrula/embryology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , In Situ Hybridization , Mutagenesis , Organizers, Embryonic/embryology , Sea Anemones/embryology , Sea Anemones/metabolism , Wnt Signaling Pathway/genetics , beta Catenin/genetics , beta Catenin/metabolism
13.
Zoology (Jena) ; 118(2): 89-101, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25749284

ABSTRACT

Organizers are specific tissue regions of developing organisms that provide accuracy and robustness to the body plan formation. Hydrozoan cnidarians (both solitary and colonial) require organizer regions for maintaining the regular body patterning during continuous tissue dynamics during asexual reproduction and growth. While the hypostomal organizer of the solitary Hydra has been studied relatively well, our knowledge of organizers in colonial hydrozoans remains fragmentary and incomplete. As colonial hydrozoans demonstrate an amazing diversity of morphological and life history traits, it is of special interest to investigate the organizers specific for particular ontogenetic stages and particular types of colonies. In the present study we aimed to assess the inductive capacities of several candidate organizer regions in hydroids with different colony organization. We carried out grafting experiments on colonial hydrozoans belonging to Leptothecata and Anthoathecata. We confirmed that the hypostome tip is an organizer in the colonial Anthoathecata as it is in the solitary polyp Hydra. We also found that the posterior tip of the larva is an organizer in hydroids regardless of the peculiarities of their metamorphosis mode and colony structure. We show for the first time that the shoot growing tip, which can be considered a key evolutionary novelty of Leptothecata, is an organizer region. Taken together, our data demonstrate that organizers function throughout the larval and polypoid stages in colonial hydroids.


Subject(s)
Aquatic Organisms/growth & development , Body Patterning/physiology , Hydrozoa/growth & development , Animals , Aquatic Organisms/cytology , Hydrozoa/cytology , Larva
14.
Evol Dev ; 16(6): 323-38, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25346055

ABSTRACT

With the rapid increase of the quantity of molecular data, many animals joined the ranks of the so-called 'emerging models' of Evo-Devo. One of the necessary steps in converting an emerging model into an established one is gaining comprehensive knowledge of its normal embryonic development. The marine colonial hydrozoan Hydractinia echinata - an excellent model for research on stem cells, metamorphosis, and allorecognition - has been studied for decades. Yet knowledge of its embryonic development remains fragmentary and incomplete. Here we provide a detailed account of H. echinata embryonic development using in vivo observations, histology, immunohistochemistry, and electron microscopy. Furthermore, we propose a model describing the cellular basis of the morphogenetic movements occurring during development and also reveal a functional link between canonical Wnt signaling and regional differences in the morphology of the embryo. Hydractinia embryogenesis is an example of the diversity and plasticity of hydrozoan development where multiple routes lead to the same result - the formation of a normal planula larva.


Subject(s)
Hydrozoa/growth & development , Animals , Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism , Embryonic Development , Fertilization , Gastrulation , Hydrozoa/cytology , Oocytes/growth & development , Stem Cells/cytology
15.
Development ; 139(23): 4374-82, 2012 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23095884

ABSTRACT

Functional and morphological planar cell polarity (PCP) oriented along the oral-aboral body axis is clearly evident in the ectoderm of torpedo-shaped planula larvae of hydrozoan cnidarians such as Clytia hemisphaerica. Ectodermal epithelial cells bear a single motile cilium the beating of which is coordinated between cells, causing directional swimming towards the blunt, aboral pole. We have characterised PCP during Clytia larval development and addressed its molecular basis. PCP is first detectable in ectodermal cells during gastrulation as coordinated basal body positioning, the ciliary root becoming consistently positioned on the oral side of the apical surface of the cell. At later stages, more pronounced structural polarity develops around the base of each cilium in relation to the cilia beating direction, including a characteristic asymmetric cortical actin organisation. Morpholino antisense oligonucleotide and mRNA injection studies showed that PCP development requires the Clytia orthologues of the core Fz-PCP pathway components Strabismus (CheStbm), Frizzled (CheFz1) and Dishevelled (CheDsh). Morpholinos targeting any of these components prevented ectodermal PCP, disrupted ciliogenesis and inhibited embryo elongation during gastrulation, which involves cell intercalation. We show that YFP-tagged CheStbm adopts a polarised intracellular distribution, localising preferentially to the aboral boundary of each cell, as has been demonstrated in Drosophila and some vertebrate PCP studies. Our findings in a cnidarian strongly suggest that the Fz-PCP pathway is a highly conserved and evolutionary ancient metazoan feature that is probably widely responsible for oriented swimming and/or feeding in relation to body axis in the many ciliated larval types found throughout the animal kingdom.


Subject(s)
Cell Polarity , Ectoderm/cytology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/physiology , Hydrozoa/embryology , Membrane Proteins/physiology , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/genetics , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/physiology , Animals , Body Patterning/genetics , Cell Differentiation , Cilia/physiology , Dishevelled Proteins , Drosophila Proteins , Ectoderm/physiology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Frizzled Receptors/genetics , Frizzled Receptors/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Hydrozoa/cytology , Hydrozoa/genetics , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Morpholinos/genetics , Phosphoproteins/genetics , Phosphoproteins/physiology , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Wnt Proteins/metabolism , Wnt Signaling Pathway
17.
Dev Biol ; 310(2): 264-79, 2007 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17716644

ABSTRACT

We investigated the early development of the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis, an emerging model system of the Cnidaria. Early cleavage stages are characterized by substantial variability from embryo to embryo, yet invariably lead to the formation of a coeloblastula. The coeloblastula undergoes a series of unusual broad invaginations-evaginations which can be blocked by cell cycle inhibitors suggesting a causal link of the invagination cycles to the synchronized cell divisions. Blastula invagination cycles stop as cell divisions become asynchronous. Marking experiments show a clear correspondence of the animal-vegetal axis of the egg to the oral-aboral axis of the embryo. The animal pole gives rise to the concave side of the blastula and later to the blastopore of the gastrula, and hence the oral pole of the future polyp. Asymmetric distribution of granules in the unfertilized egg suggest an animal-vegetal asymmetry in the egg in addition to the localized position of the pronucleus. To determine whether this asymmetry reflects asymmetrically distributed determinants along the animal-vegetal axis, we carried out blastomere isolations and embryonic divisions at various stages. Our data strongly indicate that normal primary polyps develop only if cellular material from the animal hemisphere is included, whereas the vegetal hemisphere alone is incapable to differentiate an oral pole. Molecular marker analysis suggests that also the correct patterning of the aboral pole depends on signals from the oral half. This suggests that in Nematostella embryos the animal hemisphere contains organizing activity to form a normal polyp.


Subject(s)
Sea Anemones/physiology , Animals , Blastula/physiology , Body Patterning/physiology , Cell Differentiation/physiology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/embryology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/physiology , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Morphogenesis , Sea Anemones/cytology , Sea Anemones/embryology
18.
Int J Dev Biol ; 51(1): 45-56, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17183464

ABSTRACT

Cnidarians are unique organisms in the animal kingdom because of their unequalled potential to undergo reverse development (RD). The life cycle of some species can temporarily shift ordinary, downstream development from zygote to adult into the opposite ontogenetic direction by back-transformation of some life stages. The potential for RD in cnidarians offers the possibility to investigate how integrative signalling networks operate to control directionality of ontogeny (reverse vs. normal development). Striking examples are found in some hydrozoans, where RD of medusa bud or liberated medusa stages leads to rejuvenation of the post-larval polyp stage. Artificial stress may determine ontogeny reversal. We describe here the results of experimental assays on artificial induction of RD by different chemical and physical inducers on two marine hydrozoans, Turritopsis dohrnii and Hydractinia carnea, showing a different potential for RD. A cascade of morphogenetic events occurs during RD by molecular mechanisms and cellular patterns recalling larval metamorphosis. For the first time, we show here that exposure to cesium chloride (CsCl), an inducer of larval metamorphosis, may also induce RD, highlighting similarities and differences between these two master ontogenetic processes in cnidarians.


Subject(s)
Hydrozoa/growth & development , Animals , Cesium/pharmacology , Chlorides/pharmacology , Life Cycle Stages/drug effects , Metamorphosis, Biological , Signal Transduction
19.
Int J Dev Biol ; 50(2-3): 267-75, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16479494

ABSTRACT

The factors governing the pattern formation process in the early morphogenesis of a marine colonial hydroid, Dynamena pumila, have been studied. Two different types of morphogenesis have been distinguished. Morphogenesis of the first type goes on via changes in cell shape and cell axis orientation, while morphogenesis of the second type is based upon the active coordinated cell movements associated with cell rearrangements. It was shown that morphogenesis of both types can be considered as cascades in which any event is a consequence of the previous one. The spatial structure of each developmental stage contains information about the direction and the initial conditions of further morphogenesis. So, an "epigenetic program" of morphogenesis gradually originates in the course of development and provides the stable reproduction of spatial structures. It is reasonable to consider the activity of epigenetic factors guiding Dynamena morphogenesis (geometry/topology of an embryo, heterogeneity of an embryo spatial structure, configuration of the field of mechanical stresses of the embryo surface) as "morphomechanical programming" of morphogenesis.


Subject(s)
Biomechanical Phenomena , Cnidaria/embryology , Morphogenesis/physiology , Animals
20.
Dev Genes Evol ; 216(3): 119-32, 2006 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16416137

ABSTRACT

The sea anemone Nematostella vectensis has recently been established as a new model system for the understanding of the evolution of developmental processes. In particular, the evolutionary origin of gastrulation and its molecular regulation are the subject of intense investigation. However, while molecular data are rapidly accumulating, no detailed morphological data exist describing the process of gastrulation. Here, we carried out an ultrastructural study of different stages of gastrulation in Nematostella using transmission electron microscope and scanning electron microscopy techniques. We show that presumptive endodermal cells undergo a change in cell shape, reminiscent of the bottle cells known from vertebrates and several invertebrates. Presumptive endodermal cells organize into a field, the pre-endodermal plate, which undergoes invagination. In parallel, the endodermal cells decrease their apical cell contacts but remain loosely attached to each other. Hence, during early gastrulation they display an incomplete epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). At a late stage of gastrulation, the cells eventually detach and fill the interior of the blastocoel as mesenchymal cells. This shows that gastrulation in Nematostella occurs by a combination of invagination and late immigration involving EMT. The comparison with molecular expression studies suggests that cells expressing snailA undergo EMT and become endodermal, whereas forkhead/brachyury expressing cells at the ectodermal margin of the blastopore retain their epithelial integrity throughout gastrulation.


Subject(s)
Cell Movement/physiology , Gastrula/ultrastructure , Sea Anemones/ultrastructure , Animals , Blastoderm/cytology , Blastoderm/ultrastructure , Embryo, Nonmammalian , Embryonic Development/physiology , Embryonic Structures/ultrastructure , Endoderm/cytology , Endoderm/ultrastructure , Models, Biological , Sea Anemones/embryology
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