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1.
Methods Cell Biol ; 133: 139-63, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27263412

ABSTRACT

Morphogens were originally defined as secreted signaling molecules that diffuse from local sources to form concentration gradients, which specify multiple cell fates. More recently morphogen gradients have been shown to incorporate a range of mechanisms including short-range signal activation, transcriptional/translational feedback, and temporal windows of target gene induction. Many critical cell-cell signals implicated in both embryonic development and disease, such as Wnt, fibroblast growth factor (Fgf), hedgehog (Hh), transforming growth factor beta (TGFb), and retinoic acid (RA), are thought to act as morphogens, but key information on signal propagation and ligand distribution has been lacking for most. The zebrafish provides unique advantages for genetics and imaging to address gradients during early embryonic stages when morphogens help establish major body axes. This has been particularly informative for RA, where RA response elements (RAREs) driving fluorescent reporters as well as Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) reporters of receptor binding have provided evidence for gradients, as well as regulatory mechanisms that attenuate noise and enhance gradient robustness in vivo. Here we summarize available tools in zebrafish and discuss their utility for studying dynamic regulation of RA morphogen gradients, through combined experimental and computational approaches.


Subject(s)
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Tretinoin/metabolism , Zebrafish/growth & development , Animals , Body Patterning , Morphogenesis , Receptors, Retinoic Acid/genetics , Receptors, Retinoic Acid/metabolism , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Zebrafish/genetics
2.
Development ; 128(16): 3081-94, 2001 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11688558

ABSTRACT

We describe a new zebrafish mutation, neckless, and present evidence that it inactivates retinaldehyde dehydrogenase type 2, an enzyme involved in retinoic acid biosynthesis. neckless embryos are characterised by a truncation of the anteroposterior axis anterior to the somites, defects in midline mesendodermal tissues and absence of pectoral fins. At a similar anteroposterior level within the nervous system, expression of the retinoic acid receptor a and hoxb4 genes is delayed and significantly reduced. Consistent with a primary defect in retinoic acid signalling, some of these defects in neckless mutants can be rescued by application of exogenous retinoic acid. We use mosaic analysis to show that the reduction in hoxb4 expression in the nervous system is a non-cell autonomous effect, reflecting a requirement for retinoic acid signalling from adjacent paraxial mesoderm. Together, our results demonstrate a conserved role for retinaldehyde dehydrogenase type 2 in patterning the posterior cranial mesoderm of the vertebrate embryo and provide definitive evidence for an involvement of endogenous retinoic acid in signalling between the paraxial mesoderm and neural tube.


Subject(s)
Aldehyde Oxidoreductases/genetics , Mesoderm/metabolism , Mutation , Rhombencephalon/metabolism , Aldehyde Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cloning, Molecular , Ectoderm/metabolism , Genetic Linkage , Homeodomain Proteins/metabolism , In Situ Hybridization , In Situ Nick-End Labeling , Models, Biological , Models, Genetic , Molecular Sequence Data , Neural Crest/embryology , Notochord/embryology , Phenotype , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Receptors, Retinoic Acid/metabolism , Retinal Dehydrogenase , Retinoic Acid Receptor alpha , Rhombencephalon/embryology , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Signal Transduction , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Tretinoin/metabolism , Tretinoin/pharmacology , Zebrafish , Zebrafish Proteins/agonists
3.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 356(1414): 1599-613, 2001 Oct 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11604126

ABSTRACT

All chordates share a basic body plan and many common features of early development. Anteroposterior (AP) regions of the vertebrate neural tube are specified by a combinatorial pattern of Hox gene expression that is conserved in urochordates and cephalochordates. Another primitive feature of Hox gene regulation in all chordates is a sensitivity to retinoic acid during embryogenesis, and recent developmental genetic studies have demonstrated the essential role for retinoid signalling in vertebrates. Two AP regions develop within the chordate neural tube during gastrulation: an anterior 'forebrain-midbrain' region specified by Otx genes and a posterior 'hindbrain-spinal cord' region specified by Hox genes. A third, intermediate region corresponding to the midbrain or midbrain-hindbrain boundary develops at around the same time in vertebrates, and comparative data suggest that this was also present in the chordate ancestor. Within the anterior part of the Hox-expressing domain, however, vertebrates appear to have evolved unique roles for segmentation genes, such as Krox-20, in patterning the hindbrain. Genetic approaches in mammals and zebrafish, coupled with molecular phylogenetic studies in ascidians, amphioxus and lampreys, promise to reveal how the complex mechanisms that specify the vertebrate body plan may have arisen from a relatively simple set of ancestral developmental components.


Subject(s)
Avian Proteins , Biological Evolution , Body Patterning/genetics , Chordata, Nonvertebrate/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Helminth Proteins , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Oncogene Proteins , Zebrafish Proteins , Animals , Chordata, Nonvertebrate/embryology , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Early Growth Response Protein 2 , Homeodomain Proteins/metabolism , Maf Transcription Factors , Mesencephalon/embryology , Mesencephalon/physiology , Otx Transcription Factors , Rhombencephalon/embryology , Rhombencephalon/physiology , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Tretinoin/physiology
4.
Dev Biol ; 231(1): 201-16, 2001 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11180963

ABSTRACT

The anterior-posterior identities of cells in the hindbrain and cranial neural crest are thought to be determined by their Hox gene expression status, but how and when cells become committed to these identities remain unclear. Here we address this in zebrafish by cell transplantation, to test plasticity in hox expression in single cells. We transplanted cells alone, or in small groups, between hindbrain rhombomeres or between the neural crest primordia of pharyngeal arches. We found that transplanted cells regulated hox expression according to their new environments. The degree of plasticity, however, depended on both the timing and the size of the transplant. At later stages transplanted cells were more likely to be irreversibly committed and maintain their hox expression, demonstrating a progressive loss of responsiveness to the environmental signals that specify segmental identities. Individual transplanted cells also showed greater plasticity than those lying within the center of larger groups, suggesting that a community effect normally maintains hox expression within segments. We also raised experimental embryos to larval stages to analyze transplanted cells after differentiation and found that neural crest cells contributed to pharyngeal cartilages appropriate to the anterior-posterior level of the new cellular environment. Thus, consistent with models implicating hox expression in control of segmental identity, plasticity in hox expression correlates with plasticity in final cell fate.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Neural Crest/metabolism , Rhombencephalon/metabolism , Xenopus Proteins , Zebrafish Proteins , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Bone and Bones/embryology , Ectoderm/physiology
5.
Development ; 127(17): 3815-28, 2000 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10934026

ABSTRACT

Mutation of sucker (suc) disrupts development of the lower jaw and other ventral cartilages in pharyngeal segments of the zebrafish head. Our sequencing, cosegregation and rescue results indicate that suc encodes an Endothelin-1 (Et-1). Like mouse and chick Et-1, suc/et-1 is expressed in a central core of arch paraxial mesoderm and in arch epithelia, both surface ectoderm and pharyngeal endoderm, but not in skeletogenic neural crest. Long before chondrogenesis, suc/et-1 mutant embryos have severe defects in ventral arch neural crest expression of dHAND, dlx2, msxE, gsc, dlx3 and EphA3 in the anterior arches. Dorsal expression patterns are unaffected. Later in development, suc/et-1 mutant embryos display defects in mesodermal and endodermal tissues of the pharynx. Ventral premyogenic condensations fail to express myoD, which correlates with a ventral muscle defect. Further, expression of shh in endoderm of the first pharyngeal pouch fails to extend as far laterally as in wild types. We use mosaic analyses to show that suc/et-1 functions nonautonomously in neural crest cells, and is thus required in the environment of postmigratory neural crest cells to specify ventral arch fates. Our mosaic analyses further show that suc/et-1 nonautonomously functions in mesendoderm for ventral arch muscle formation. Collectively our results support a model for dorsoventral patterning of the gnathostome pharyngeal arches in which Et-1 in the environment of the postmigratory cranial neural crest specifies the lower jaw and other ventral arch fates.


Subject(s)
Branchial Region/embryology , Endothelin-1/genetics , Endothelin-1/metabolism , Zebrafish Proteins , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Cartilage/embryology , Cell Differentiation , DNA, Complementary , Endothelin-1/physiology , Epithelium/metabolism , Gene Expression , Humans , Mesoderm/metabolism , Mice , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis , Neural Crest/cytology , Zebrafish/embryology , Zebrafish/genetics
6.
Mech Dev ; 90(2): 237-52, 2000 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10640707

ABSTRACT

Fli-1 is an ETS-domain transcription factor whose locus is disrupted in Ewing's Sarcoma and F-MuLV induced erythroleukaemia. To gain a better understanding of its normal function, we have isolated the zebrafish homologue. Similarities with other vertebrates, in the amino acid sequence and DNA binding properties of Fli-1 from zebrafish, suggest that its function has been conserved during vertebrate evolution. The initial expression of zebrafish fli-1 in the posterior lateral mesoderm overlaps with that of gata2 in a potential haemangioblast population which likely contains precursors of blood and endothelium. Subsequently, fli-1 and gata2 expression patterns diverge, with separate fli-1 and gata2 expression domains arising in the developing vasculature and in sites of blood formation respectively. Elsewhere in the embryo, fli-1 is expressed in sites of vasculogenesis. The expression of fli-1 was investigated in a number of zebrafish mutants, which affect the circulatory system. In cloche, endothelium is absent and blood is drastically reduced. In contrast to the blood and endothelial markers that have been studied previously, fli-1 expression was initiated normally in cloche embryos, indicating that induction of fli-1 is one of the earliest indicators of haemangioblast formation. Furthermore, although fli-1 expression in the trunk was not maintained, the normal expression pattern in the anterior half of the embryo was retained. These anterior cells did not, however, condense to form blood vessels. These data indicate that cloche has previously unsuspected roles at multiple stages in the formation of the vasculature. Analysis of fli-1 expression in midline patterning mutants floating head and squint, confirms a requirement for the notochord in the formation of the dorsal-aorta. The formation of endothelium in one-eyed pinhead, cyclops and squint embryos indicates a novel role for the endoderm in the formation of the axial vein. The phenotype of sonic-you mutants implies a likely role for Sonic Hedgehog in mediating these processes.


Subject(s)
DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Neovascularization, Physiologic/physiology , Proto-Oncogene Proteins , Trans-Activators/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Cloning, Molecular , DNA/metabolism , Endothelium, Vascular/cytology , Endothelium, Vascular/metabolism , GATA2 Transcription Factor , Gene Expression , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/metabolism , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Humans , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins , Mice , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Nodal Signaling Ligands , Proto-Oncogene Protein c-fli-1 , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Stem Cells/cytology , Stem Cells/metabolism , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transforming Growth Factor beta/genetics , Zebrafish
7.
Curr Biol ; 9(24): 1481-4, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10607595

ABSTRACT

Pharyngeal arches are a prominent and critical feature of the developing vertebrate head. They constitute a series of bulges within which musculature and skeletal elements form; importantly, these tissues derive from different embryonic cell types [1]. Numerous studies have emphasised the role of the cranial neural crest, from which the skeletal components derive, in patterning the pharyngeal arches [2-4]. It has never been clear, however, whether all arch patterning is completely dependent on this cell type. Here, we show that pharyngeal arch formation is not coupled to the process of crest migration and, furthermore, that pharyngeal arches form, are regionalized and have a sense of identity even in the absence of the neural crest. Thus, vertebrate head morphogenesis can now be seen to be a more complex process than was previously believed and must result from an integration of both neural-crest-dependent and -independent patterning mechanisms. Our results also reflect the fact that the evolutionary origin of pharyngeal segmentation predates that of the neural crest, which is an exclusively vertebrate characteristic.


Subject(s)
Branchial Region/embryology , Neural Crest/embryology , Trans-Activators , Transforming Growth Factor beta , Animals , Biological Evolution , Body Patterning/genetics , Bone Morphogenetic Protein 7 , Bone Morphogenetic Proteins/genetics , Chick Embryo , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Fibroblast Growth Factor 8 , Fibroblast Growth Factors/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Genetic Markers , Hedgehog Proteins , In Situ Hybridization , Paired Box Transcription Factors , Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics
9.
Dev Biol ; 210(2): 277-87, 1999 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10357891

ABSTRACT

Left-right (LR) asymmetry of the heart in vertebrates is regulated by early asymmetric signals in the embryo, including the secreted signal Sonic hedgehog (Shh), but less is known about LR asymmetries of visceral organs. Here we show that Shh also specifies asymmetries in visceral precursors in the zebrafish and that cardiac and visceral sidedness are independent. The transcription factors fli-1 and Nkx-2.5 are expressed asymmetrically in the precardiac mesoderm and subsequently in the heart; an Eph receptor, rtk2, and an adhesion protein, DM-GRASP, mark early asymmetries in visceral endoderm. Misexpression of shh mRNA, or a dominant negative form of protein kinase A, on the right side reverses the expression of these asymmetries in precursors of both the heart and the viscera. Reversals in the heart and gut are uncoordinated, suggesting that each organ interprets the signal independently. Misexpression of Bone Morphogenetic Protein (BMP4) on the right side reverses the heart, but visceral organs are unaffected, consistent with a function for BMPs locally in the heart field. Zebrafish mutants with midline defects show independent reversals of cardiac and visceral laterality. Thus, hh signals influence the development of multiple organ asymmetries in zebrafish and different organs appear to respond to a central cascade of midline signaling independently, which in the heart involves BMP4.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning , Bone Morphogenetic Proteins/physiology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/physiology , Embryonic Induction , Proteins/physiology , Proto-Oncogene Proteins , Transcription Factors , Xenopus Proteins , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4 , Bone Morphogenetic Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Heart/embryology , Hedgehog Proteins , Homeobox Protein Nkx-2.5 , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Mesoderm/physiology , Proteins/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Protein c-fli-1 , Signal Transduction , Trans-Activators/genetics , Viscera/embryology , Zebrafish Proteins
10.
Oncogene ; 17(1): 93-104, 1998 Jul 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9671318

ABSTRACT

The PEA3 subfamily of ETS-domain proteins play important roles in regulating transcriptional activation and have been implicated in several tumorigenic processes. Here we describe the identification of a further member of this family from zebrafish which most likely represents a homologue of PEA3. A high degree of sequence conservation is observed in the ETS DNA-binding domain and acidic transcriptional activation domain. The DNA binding specificity of zebrafish PEA3 is virtually identical to that exhibited by mammalian family members and is autoregulated by cisacting inhibitory domains. Transcriptional activation by zebrafish PEA3 is potentiated by the ERK MAP kinase and protein kinase A pathways. During embryogenesis, PEA3 is expressed in complex spatial and temporal patterns in both mesodermal somites and ectodermal tissues including the brain, dorsal spinal chord and neural crest. Our characterisation of zebrafish PEA3 furthers our understanding of its molecular function and its expression profile suggests a novel role in cell patterning in the early vertebrate embryo.


Subject(s)
DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinases , Transcription Factors/genetics , Zebrafish/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Conserved Sequence , Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases/metabolism , DNA/metabolism , DNA, Complementary , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Humans , MAP Kinase Kinase 1 , Mammals , Mice , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/metabolism , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Transcriptional Activation , Zebrafish/embryology , Zebrafish/metabolism , Zebrafish Proteins
11.
Development ; 124(15): 2945-60, 1997 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9247337

ABSTRACT

The head skeleton and muscles of the zebrafish develop in a stereotyped pattern in the embryo, including seven pharyngeal arches and a basicranium underlying the brain and sense organs. To investigate how individual cartilages and muscles are specified and organized within each head segment, we have examined their early differentiation using Alcian labeling of cartilage and expression of several molecular markers of muscle cells. Zebrafish larvae begin feeding by four days after fertilization, but cartilage and muscle precursors develop in the pharyngeal arches up to 2 days earlier. These chondroblasts and myoblasts lie close together within each segment and differentiate in synchrony, perhaps reflecting the interdependent nature of their patterning. Initially, cells within a segment condense and gradually become subdivided into individual dorsal and ventral structures of the differentiated arch. Cartilages or muscles in one segment show similar patterns of condensation and differentiation as their homologues in another, but vary in size and shape in the most anterior (mandibular and hyoid) and posterior (tooth-bearing) arches, possibly as a consequence of changes in the timing of their development. Our results reveal a segmental scaffold of early cartilage and muscle precursors and suggest that interactions between them coordinate their patterning in the embryo. These data provide a descriptive basis for genetic analyses of craniofacial patterning.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/physiology , Branchial Region , Cartilage/embryology , Pharyngeal Muscles/embryology , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Head , Jaw/embryology , Muscle, Skeletal/embryology , Muscle, Skeletal/innervation , Pharyngeal Muscles/innervation , Pharynx/embryology
12.
Bioessays ; 19(6): 459-68, 1997 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9204763

ABSTRACT

Every cartilage and bone in the vertebrate skeleton has a precise shape and position. The head skeleton develops in the embryo from the neural crest, which emigrates from the neural ectoderm and forms the skull and pharyngeal arches. Recent genetic data from mice and zebrafish suggest that cells in the pharyngeal segments are specified by positional information in at least two dimensions, Hox genes along the anterior-posterior axis and other homeobox genes along the dorsal-ventral axis within a segment. Many zebrafish and human mutant phenotypes indicate that additional genes are required for the development of groups of adjacent pharyngeal arches and for patterning along the mediolateral axis of the skull. The complementary genetic approaches in humans, mice and fish reveal networks of genes that specify the complex morphology of the head skeleton along a relatively simple set of coordinates.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Skull/embryology , Animals , Embryo, Nonmammalian/embryology , Embryonic and Fetal Development/genetics , Female , Humans , Mice , Pregnancy , Zebrafish
13.
Development ; 123: 329-44, 1996 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9007253

ABSTRACT

Jaws and branchial arches together are a basic, segmented feature of the vertebrate head. Seven arches develop in the zebrafish embryo (Danio rerio), derived largely from neural crest cells that form the cartilaginous skeleton. In this and the following paper we describe the phenotypes of 109 arch mutants, focusing here on three classes that affect the posterior pharyngeal arches, including the hyoid and five gill-bearing arches. In lockjaw, the hyoid arch is strongly reduced and subsets of branchial arches do not develop. Mutants of a large second class, designated the flathead group, lack several adjacent branchial arches and their associated cartilages. Five alleles at the flathead locus all lead to larvae that lack arches 4-6. Among 34 other flathead group members complementation tests are incomplete, but at least six unique phenotypes can be distinguished. These all delete continuous stretches of adjacent branchial arches and unpaired cartilages in the ventral midline. Many show cell death in the midbrain, from which some neural crest precursors of the arches originate. lockjaw and a few mutants in the flathead group, including pistachio, affect both jaw cartilage and pigmentation, reflecting essential functions of these genes in at least two neural crest lineages. Mutants of a third class, including boxer, dackel and pincher, affect pectoral fins and axonal trajectories in the brain, as well as the arches. Their skeletal phenotypes suggest that they disrupt cartilage morphogenesis in all arches. Our results suggest that there are sets of genes that: (1) specify neural crest cells in groups of adjacent head segments, and (2) function in common genetic pathways in a variety of tissues including the brain, pectoral fins and pigment cells as well as pharyngeal arches.


Subject(s)
Branchial Region/embryology , Jaw/embryology , Mutation , Zebrafish/embryology , Zebrafish/genetics , Animals , Branchial Region/abnormalities , Extremities/embryology , Facial Bones/embryology , Hyoid Bone/embryology , Limb Deformities, Congenital , Mesencephalon/abnormalities , Mesencephalon/embryology , Mouth/embryology , Necrosis , Pharynx/abnormalities , Pharynx/embryology , Phenotype , Pigmentation/genetics , Skull/embryology , Superior Colliculi/abnormalities , Superior Colliculi/embryology
14.
Development ; 123: 345-56, 1996 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9007254

ABSTRACT

In a large scale screen for mutants that affect the early development of the zebrafish, 109 mutants were found that cause defects in the formation of the jaw and the more posterior pharyngeal arches. Here we present the phenotypic description and results of the complementation analysis of mutants belonging to two major classes: (1) mutants with defects in the mandibular and hyoid arches and (2) mutants with defects in cartilage differentiation and growth in all arches. Mutations in four of the genes identified during the screen show specific defects in the first two arches and leave the more posterior pharyngeal arches largely unaffected (schmerle, sucker, hoover and sturgeon). In these mutants ventral components of the mandibular and hyoid arches are reduced (Meckel's cartilage and ceratohyal cartilage) whereas dorsal structures (palatoquadrate and hyosymplectic cartilages) are of normal size or enlarged. Thus, mutations in single genes cause defects in the formation of first and second arch structures but also differentially affect development of the dorsal and ventral structures within one arch. In 27 mutants that define at least 8 genes, the differentiation of cartilage and growth is affected. In hammerhead mutants particularly the mesodermally derived cartilages are reduced, whereas jellyfish mutant larvae are characterized by a severe reduction of all cartilaginous elements, leaving only two pieces in the position of the ceratohyal cartilages. In all other mutant larvae all skeletal elements are present, but consist of smaller and disorganized chondrocytes. These mutants also exhibit shortened heads and reduced pectoral fins. In homozygous knorrig embryos, tumor-like outgrowths of chondrocytes occur along the edges of all cartilaginous elements. The mutants presented here may be valuable tools for elucidating the genetic mechanisms that underlie the development of the mandibular and the hyoid arches, as well as the process of cartilage differentiation.


Subject(s)
Branchial Region/embryology , Cartilage/embryology , Jaw/embryology , Mutation , Zebrafish/embryology , Zebrafish/genetics , Animals , Branchial Region/abnormalities , Cartilage/abnormalities , Cartilage/pathology , Cell Division/genetics , Extracellular Matrix/pathology , Head and Neck Neoplasms/embryology , Head and Neck Neoplasms/genetics , Head and Neck Neoplasms/pathology , Larva , Phenotype , Skull/embryology
15.
Development ; 122(5): 1417-26, 1996 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8625830

ABSTRACT

During vertebrate development, neural crest cells are thought to pattern many aspects of head organization, including the segmented skeleton and musculature of the jaw and gills. Here we describe mutations at the gene chinless, chn, that disrupt the skeletal fates of neural crest cells in the head of the zebrafish and their interactions with muscle precursors. chn mutants lack neural-crest-derived cartilage and mesoderm-derived muscles in all seven pharyngeal arches. Fate mapping and gene expression studies demonstrate the presence of both undifferentiated cartilage and muscle precursors in mutants. However, chn blocks differentiation directly in neural crest, and not in mesoderm, as revealed by mosaic analyses. Neural crest cells taken from wild-type donor embryos can form cartilage when transplanted into chn mutant hosts and rescue some of the patterning defects of mutant pharyngeal arches. In these cases, cartilage only forms if neural crest is transplanted at least one hour before its migration, suggesting that interactions occur transiently in early jaw precursors. In contrast, transplanted cells in paraxial mesoderm behave according to the host genotype; mutant cells form jaw muscles in a wild-type environment. These results suggest that chn is required for the development of pharyngeal cartilages from cranial neural crest cells and subsequent crest signals that pattern mesodermally derived myocytes.


Subject(s)
Cell Communication , Jaw/embryology , Mutation , Neural Crest/embryology , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Branchial Region/embryology , Cartilage/embryology , Cell Lineage , Embryonic Induction , Mesoderm/physiology , Mosaicism , Musculoskeletal System/embryology , Neural Crest/cytology , Time Factors , Tissue Transplantation , Zebrafish/genetics
16.
Dev Dyn ; 203(3): 253-310, 1995 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8589427

ABSTRACT

We describe a series of stages for development of the embryo of the zebrafish, Danio (Brachydanio) rerio. We define seven broad periods of embryogenesis--the zygote, cleavage, blastula, gastrula, segmentation, pharyngula, and hatching periods. These divisions highlight the changing spectrum of major developmental processes that occur during the first 3 days after fertilization, and we review some of what is known about morphogenesis and other significant events that occur during each of the periods. Stages subdivide the periods. Stages are named, not numbered as in most other series, providing for flexibility and continued evolution of the staging series as we learn more about development in this species. The stages, and their names, are based on morphological features, generally readily identified by examination of the live embryo with the dissecting stereomicroscope. The descriptions also fully utilize the optical transparancy of the live embryo, which provides for visibility of even very deep structures when the embryo is examined with the compound microscope and Nomarski interference contrast illumination. Photomicrographs and composite camera lucida line drawings characterize the stages pictorially. Other figures chart the development of distinctive characters used as staging aid signposts.


Subject(s)
Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Blastocyst/cytology , Cleavage Stage, Ovum/cytology , Gastrula/cytology , Morphogenesis/physiology , Temperature , Time Factors , Zygote/cytology
17.
Development ; 120(3): 483-94, 1994 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8162849

ABSTRACT

In zebrafish, the segmental series of pharyngeal arches is formed predominantly by two migratory cell types, neural crest and paraxial mesoderm, which arise in the early embryo. Neural crest cells migrate ventrally out of the neuroepithelium and into the arches to form cartilage, neurons, glia and pigment cells. Surrounding mesoderm generates muscles and endothelia. We labeled individual pharyngeal precursor cells with fluorescent dyes and found that their clonal progeny were confined to single segments and generated single cell types. When a neural crest or mesodermal cell was marked before migration into the pharynx, its progeny dispersed but generally remained confined to a single arch primordium. Such segmental restrictions arose first in the most rostral arches, mandibular and hyoid, and progressed caudally. The phenotypes of progeny generated by single cells were examined in the mandibular arch. Clones derived from premigratory neural crest cells generally did not contribute to more than one cell type. Further, the progenitors of some cell types were spatially separated in the premigratory crest. In particular, neurogenic crest cells were situated further laterally than cells that generate cartilage and connective tissues, while pigment and glial cell progenitors were more evenly distributed. Based on these results we suggest that arch precursors may be specified as to their eventual fates before the major morphogenetic movements that form the arch primordia. Further, cell movements are restricted during segmentation establishing a group of arch precursors as a unit of developmental patterning, as in the fashion of vertebrate rhombomeres or segmental lineage compartments in Drosophila.


Subject(s)
Branchial Region/embryology , Mesoderm/physiology , Neural Crest/physiology , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Cell Movement/physiology , Mesoderm/cytology , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Morphogenesis/physiology , Neural Crest/cytology
18.
Development ; 119(4): 1203-15, 1993 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8306883

ABSTRACT

Mesoderm formation is critical for the establishment of the animal body plan and in Drosophila requires the snail gene. This report concerns the cloning and expression pattern of the structurally similar gene snail1 from zebrafish. In situ hybridization shows that the quantity of snail1 RNA increases at the margin of the blastoderm in cells that involute during gastrulation. As gastrulation begins, snail1 RNA disappears from the dorsal axial mesoderm and becomes restricted to the paraxial mesoderm and the tail bud. snail1 RNA increases in cells that define the posterior border of each somite and then disappears when somitic cells differentiate. Later in development, expression appears in cephalic neural crest derivatives. Many snail1-expressing cells were missing from mutant spadetail embryos and the quantity of snail1 RNA was greatly reduced in mutant no tail embryos. The work presented here suggests that snail1 is involved in morphogenetic events during gastrulation, somitogenesis and development of the cephalic neural crest, and that no tail may act as a positive regulator of snail1.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression/genetics , Genes/genetics , Zebrafish/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Gastrula/physiology , In Situ Hybridization , Mesoderm/physiology , Molecular Sequence Data , Morphogenesis/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Neural Crest/physiology , Sequence Homology , Zebrafish/embryology
20.
Science ; 250(4982): 802-5, 1990 Nov 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1978412

ABSTRACT

Molecules that determine the specific features of individual muscles in vertebrates are unknown. Antibody labeling studies described here revealed a molecular difference among muscles in the zebrafish head, in that two functionally related jaw muscles (the levator arcus palatini and the dilator operculi), and not other head muscles, expressed engrailed-homeodomain proteins. Expression began in mesoderm-derived muscle-precursor cells in the paraxial mesenchyme and continued during muscle morphogenesis and differentiation. Growth cones of trigeminal motoneurons that innervate these muscles associated with the precursors within a few hours of the time they began to express engrailed. It is proposed that the engrailed proteins in these cells establish muscle identity and neuromuscular target recognition.


Subject(s)
DNA-Binding Proteins/blood , Gene Expression Regulation , Genes, Homeobox , Jaw/embryology , Muscles/embryology , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Cell Differentiation , Morphogenesis , Motor Neurons/cytology , Muscles/innervation , Muscles/metabolism
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