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1.
BMC Biol ; 22(1): 74, 2024 Apr 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38561802

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The tunicates form a group of filter-feeding marine animals closely related to vertebrates. They share with them a number of features such as a notochord and a dorsal neural tube in the tadpole larvae of ascidians, one of the three groups that make tunicates. However, a number of typical chordate characters have been lost in different branches of tunicates, a diverse and fast-evolving phylum. Consequently, the tunic, a sort of exoskeleton made of extracellular material including cellulose secreted by the epidermis, is the unifying character defining the tunicate phylum. In the larva of ascidians, the tunic differentiates in the tail into a median fin (with dorsal and ventral extended blades) and a caudal fin. RESULTS: Here we have performed experiments in the ascidian Phallusia mammillata to address the molecular control of tunic 3D morphogenesis. We have demonstrated that the tail epidermis medio-lateral patterning essential for peripheral nervous system specification also controls tunic elongation into fins. More specifically, when tail epidermis midline identity was abolished by BMP signaling inhibition, or CRISPR/Cas9 inactivation of the transcription factor coding genes Msx or Klf1/2/4/17, median fin did not form. We postulated that this genetic program should regulate effectors of tunic secretion. We thus analyzed the expression and regulation in different ascidian species of two genes acquired by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) from bacteria, CesA coding for a cellulose synthase and Gh6 coding for a cellulase. We have uncovered an unexpected dynamic history of these genes in tunicates and high levels of variability in gene expression and regulation among ascidians. Although, in Phallusia, Gh6 has a regionalized expression in the epidermis compatible with an involvement in fin elongation, our functional studies indicate a minor function during caudal fin formation only. CONCLUSIONS: Our study constitutes an important step in the study of the integration of HGT-acquired genes into developmental networks and a cellulose-based morphogenesis of extracellular material in animals.


Asunto(s)
Urocordados , Animales , Urocordados/genética , Morfogénesis/genética , Epidermis , Sistema Nervioso Periférico , Larva/genética , Celulosa
2.
Genome Biol Evol ; 16(3)2024 03 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38441487

RESUMEN

Ascidian embryos have been studied since the birth of experimental embryology at the end of the 19th century. They represent textbook examples of mosaic development characterized by a fast development with very few cells and invariant cleavage patterns and lineages. Ascidians belong to tunicates, the vertebrate sister group, and their study is essential to shed light on the emergence of vertebrates. Importantly, deciphering developmental gene regulatory networks has been carried out mostly in two of the three ascidian orders, Phlebobranchia and Stolidobranchia. To infer ancestral developmental programs in ascidians, it is thus essential to carry out molecular embryology in the third ascidian order, the Aplousobranchia. Here, we present genomic resources for the colonial aplousobranch Clavelina lepadiformis: a transcriptome produced from various embryonic stages, and an annotated genome. The assembly consists of 184 contigs making a total of 233.6 Mb with a N50 of 8.5 Mb and a L50 of 11. The 32,318 predicted genes capture 96.3% of BUSCO orthologs. We further show that these resources are suitable to study developmental gene expression and regulation in a comparative framework within ascidians. Additionally, they will prove valuable for evolutionary and ecological studies.


Asunto(s)
Urocordados , Animales , Urocordados/genética , Vertebrados/genética , Genoma , Genómica , Evolución Biológica
3.
Front Cell Dev Biol ; 9: 744982, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34746140

RESUMEN

We report the adaptation of RNA tomography, a technique allowing spatially resolved, genome-wide expression profiling, to a species occupying a key phylogenetic position in gnathostomes, the catshark Scyliorhinus canicula. We focused analysis on head explants at an embryonic stage, shortly following neural tube closure and of interest for a number of developmental processes, including early brain patterning, placode specification or the establishment of epithalamic asymmetry. As described in the zebrafish, we have sequenced RNAs extracted from serial sections along transverse, horizontal and sagittal planes, mapped the data onto a gene reference taking advantage of the high continuity genome recently released in the catshark, and projected read counts onto a digital model of the head obtained by confocal microscopy. This results in the generation of a genome-wide 3D atlas, containing expression data for most protein-coding genes in a digital model of the embryonic head. The digital profiles obtained for candidate forebrain regional markers along antero-posterior, dorso-ventral and left-right axes reproduce those obtained by in situ hybridization (ISH), with expected relative organizations. We also use spatial autocorrelation and correlation as measures to analyze these data and show that they provide adequate statistical tools to extract novel expression information from the model. These data and tools allow exhaustive searches of genes exhibiting any predefined expression characteristic, such a restriction to a territory of interest, thus providing a reference for comparative analyses across gnathostomes. This methodology appears best suited to species endowed with large embryo or organ sizes and opens novel perspectives to a wide range of evo-devo model organisms, traditionally counter-selected on size criterion.

4.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 4616, 2018 03 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29545638

RESUMEN

Analysis of the establishment of epithalamic asymmetry in two non-conventional model organisms, a cartilaginous fish and a lamprey, has suggested that an essential role of Nodal signalling, likely to be ancestral in vertebrates, may have been largely lost in zebrafish. In order to decipher the cellular mechanisms underlying this divergence, we have characterised neurogenetic asymmetries during habenular development in the catshark Scyliorhinus canicula and addressed the mechanism involved in this process. As in zebrafish, neuronal differentiation starts earlier on the left side in the catshark habenulae, suggesting the conservation of a temporal regulation of neurogenesis. At later stages, marked, Alk4/5/7 dependent, size asymmetries having no clear counterparts in zebrafish also develop in neural progenitor territories, with a larger size of the proliferative, pseudostratified neuroepithelium, in the right habenula relative to the left one, but a higher cell number on the left of a more lateral, later formed population of neural progenitors. These data show that mechanisms resulting in an asymmetric, preferential maintenance of neural progenitors act both in the left and the right habenulae, on different cell populations. Such mechanisms may provide a substrate for quantitative variations accounting for the variability in size and laterality of habenular asymmetries across vertebrates.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , Embrión no Mamífero/citología , Lateralidad Funcional , Regulación del Desarrollo de la Expresión Génica , Habénula/crecimiento & desarrollo , Neurogénesis , Animales , Benzodioxoles/farmacología , Embrión no Mamífero/fisiología , Habénula/fisiología , Imidazoles/farmacología , Piridinas/farmacología , Receptores de Factores de Crecimiento Transformadores beta/antagonistas & inhibidores , Transducción de Señal
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