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Dorso/ventral genes are asymmetrically expressed and involved in germ-layer demarcation during cnidarian gastrulation

  • University of Hawai'i at Mānoa

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

105 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cnidarians (corals, sea anemones, hydroids, and jellyfish) are a basal taxon closely related to bilaterally symmetrical animals [1-3] and have been characterized as diploblastic and as radially symmetrical around their longitudinal axis. We show that some orthologs of key bilaterian dorso/ventral (D/V) patterning genes, including the TGFβ signaling molecules NvDpp and NvBMP5-8 and their antagonist NvChordin, are initially expressed asymmetrically at the onset of gastrulation in the anthozoan sea anemone Nematostella vectensis. Surprisingly, unlike flies and vertebrates, the TGFβ ligands and their antagonist are colocalized at the onset of gastrulation but then segregate by germ layer as gastrulation proceeds. TGFβ ligands, their extracellular enhancer, NvTolloid, and components of their downstream signaling pathway (NvSmad1/5 and NvSmad4) are all coexpressed in presumptive endoderm, indicating that only planar TGFβ signaling operates at these stages. NvChordin expression forms a boundary between TGFβ-expressing endodermal cells and aboral ectoderm. Manipulation of nuclear β-catenin localization affects TGFβ ligand and antagonist expression, suggesting that the ancestral role of the dpp/chordin antagonism during gastrulation may have been in germ-layer segregation and/or epithelial patterning rather than dorsal/ventral patterning.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)499-505
Number of pages7
JournalCurrent Biology
Volume16
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 7 2006

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