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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(5): 1776-1781, 2019 01 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30651312

ABSTRACT

Hunger affects the behavioral choices of all animals, and many chemosensory stimuli can be either attractive or repulsive depending on an animal's hunger state. Although hunger-induced behavioral changes are well documented, the molecular and cellular mechanisms by which hunger modulates neural circuit function to generate changes in chemosensory valence are poorly understood. Here, we use the CO2 response of the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to elucidate how hunger alters valence. We show that CO2 response valence shifts from aversion to attraction during starvation, a change that is mediated by two pairs of interneurons in the CO2 circuit, AIY and RIG. The transition from aversion to attraction is regulated by biogenic amine signaling. Dopamine promotes CO2 repulsion in well-fed animals, whereas octopamine promotes CO2 attraction in starved animals. Biogenic amines also regulate the temporal dynamics of the shift from aversion to attraction such that animals lacking octopamine show a delayed shift to attraction. Biogenic amine signaling regulates CO2 response valence by modulating the CO2-evoked activity of AIY and RIG. Our results illuminate a new role for biogenic amine signaling in regulating chemosensory valence as a function of hunger state.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans/physiology , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Sensory Receptor Cells/physiology , Animals , Biogenic Amines/metabolism , Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Dopamine/metabolism , Interneurons/metabolism , Interneurons/physiology , Nematoda/physiology , Octopamine/metabolism , Sensory Receptor Cells/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Starvation/physiopathology
2.
Development ; 143(22): 4214-4223, 2016 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27707794

ABSTRACT

How neural stem cells generate the correct number and type of differentiated neurons in appropriate places remains an important question. Although nervous systems are diverse across phyla, in many taxa the larva forms an anterior concentration of serotonergic neurons, or apical organ. The sea star embryo initially has a pan-neurogenic ectoderm, but the genetic mechanism that directs a subset of these cells to generate serotonergic neurons in a particular location is unresolved. We show that neurogenesis in sea star larvae begins with soxc-expressing multipotent progenitors. These give rise to restricted progenitors that express lhx2/9 soxc- and lhx2/9-expressing cells can undergo both asymmetric divisions, allowing for progression towards a particular neural fate, and symmetric proliferative divisions. We show that nested concentric domains of gene expression along the anterior-posterior (AP) axis, which are observed in a great diversity of metazoans, control neurogenesis in the sea star larva by promoting particular division modes and progression towards becoming a neuron. This work explains how spatial patterning in the ectoderm controls progression of neurogenesis in addition to providing spatial cues for neuron location. Modification to the sizes of these AP territories provides a simple mechanism to explain the diversity of neuron number among apical organs.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/genetics , Gene Regulatory Networks , Nervous System/embryology , Neurogenesis/genetics , Starfish/embryology , Starfish/genetics , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Cells, Cultured , Ectoderm/embryology , Ectoderm/metabolism , Embryo, Nonmammalian , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Nervous System/metabolism , Serotonergic Neurons/physiology
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 110(21): 8591-6, 2013 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23650356

ABSTRACT

A great challenge in development biology is to understand how interacting networks of regulatory genes can direct the often highly complex patterning of cells in a 3D embryo. Here, we detail the gene regulatory network that describes the distribution of ciliary band-associated neurons in the bipinnaria larva of the sea star. This larva, typically for the ancestral deuterostome dipleurula larval type that it represents, forms two loops of ciliary bands that extend across much of the anterior-posterior and dorsal-ventral ectoderm. We show that the sea star first likely uses maternally inherited factors and the Wnt and Delta pathways to distinguish neurogenic ectoderm from endomesoderm. The broad neurogenic potential of the ectoderm persists throughout much of gastrulation. Nodal, bone morphogenetic protein 2/4 (Bmp2/4), and Six3-dependent pathways then sculpt a complex ciliary band territory that is defined by the expression of the forkhead transcription factor, foxg. Foxg is needed to define two molecularly distinct ectodermal domains, and for the formation of differentiated neurons along the edge of these two territories. Thus, significantly, Bmp2/4 signaling in sea stars does not distinguish differentiated neurons from nonneuronal ectoderm as it does in many other animals, but instead contributes to the patterning of an ectodermal territory, which then, in turn, provides cues to permit the final steps of neuronal differentiation. The modularity between specification and patterning likely reflects the evolutionary history of this gene regulatory network, in which an ancient module for specification of a broad neurogenic potential ectoderm was subsequently overlaid with a module for patterning.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/physiology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/embryology , Neurogenesis/physiology , Starfish/embryology , Wnt Signaling Pathway/physiology , Animals , Base Sequence , Bone Morphogenetic Protein 2/metabolism , Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4/metabolism , Ectoderm/cytology , Ectoderm/embryology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Endoderm/cytology , Endoderm/embryology , Gastrulation/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/physiology , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Starfish/cytology , Wnt Proteins/metabolism
4.
BMC Biol ; 8: 143, 2010 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21118544

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Conservation of orthologous regulatory gene expression domains, especially along the neuroectodermal anterior-posterior axis, in animals as disparate as flies and vertebrates suggests that common patterning mechanisms have been conserved since the base of Bilateria. The homology of axial patterning is far less clear for the many marine animals that undergo a radical transformation in body plan during metamorphosis. The embryos of these animals are microscopic, feeding within the plankton until they metamorphose into their adult forms. RESULTS: We describe here the localization of 14 transcription factors within the ectoderm during early embryogenesis in Patiria miniata, a sea star with an indirectly developing planktonic bipinnaria larva. We find that the animal-vegetal axis of this very simple embryo is surprisingly well patterned. Furthermore, the patterning that we observe throughout the ectoderm generally corresponds to that of "head/anterior brain" patterning known for hemichordates and vertebrates, which share a common ancestor with the sea star. While we suggest here that aspects of head/anterior brain patterning are generally conserved, we show that another suite of genes involved in retinal determination is absent from the ectoderm of these echinoderms and instead operates within the mesoderm. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings therefore extend, for the first time, evidence of a conserved axial pattering to echinoderm embryos exhibiting maximal indirect development. The dissociation of head/anterior brain patterning from "retinal specification" in echinoderm blastulae might reflect modular changes to a developmental gene regulatory network within the ectoderm that facilitates the evolution of these microscopic larvae.


Subject(s)
Asterina/embryology , Asterina/genetics , Sea Urchins/embryology , Sea Urchins/genetics , Animals , Biological Evolution , Blastula/embryology , Body Patterning , Ectoderm/embryology , Embryonic Induction , Gene Expression Regulation , Genes, Regulator , Homeodomain Proteins/metabolism , Transcription Factors/metabolism
5.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1789(4): 326-32, 2009 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19284985

ABSTRACT

Developmental gene regulatory networks (GRNs) explain how regulatory states are established in particular cells during development and how these states then determine the final form of the embryo. Evolutionary changes to the sequence of the genome will direct reorganization of GRN architectures, which in turn will lead to the alteration of developmental programs. A comparison of GRN architectures must consequently reveal the molecular basis for the evolution of developmental programs among different organisms. This review highlights some of the important findings that have emerged from the most extensive direct comparison of GRN architectures to date. Comparison of the orthologous GRNs for endomesodermal specification in the sea urchin and sea star, provides examples of several discrete, functional GRN subcircuits and shows that they are subject to diverse selective pressures. This demonstrates that different regulatory linkages may be more or less amenable to evolutionary change. One of the more surprising findings from this comparison is that GRN-level functions may be maintained while the factors performing the functions have changed, suggesting that GRNs have a high capacity for compensatory changes involving transcription factor binding to cis regulatory modules.


Subject(s)
Echinodermata/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Regulatory Networks , Animals , Echinodermata/classification
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