Patterning the marginal zone of early ascidian embryos: localized maternal mRNA and inductive interactions
- 21 June 2002
- Vol. 24 (7) , 613-624
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.10099
Abstract
Early animal embryos are patterned by localized egg cytoplasmic factors and cell interactions. In invertebrate chordate ascidians, larval tail muscle originates from the posterior marginal zone of the early embryo. It has recently been demonstrated that maternal macho‐1 mRNA encoding transcription factor acts as a localized muscle determinant. Other mesodermal tissues such as notochord and mesenchyme are also derived from the vegetal marginal zone. In contrast, formation of these tissues requires induction from endoderm precursors at the 32‐cell stage. FGF–Ras–MAPK signaling is involved in the induction of both tissues. The responsiveness for induction to notochord or mesenchyme depends on the inheritance of localized egg cytoplasmic factors. Previous studies also point to critical roles of directed signaling in polarization of induced cells and in subsequent asymmetric divisions resulting in the formation of two daughter cells with distinct fates. One cell adopts an induced fate, while the other assumes a default fate. A simple model of mesoderm patterning in ascidian embryos is proposed in comparison with that of vertebrates. BioEssays 24:613–624, 2002.Keywords
This publication has 73 references indexed in Scilit:
- Maternal information and localized maternal mRNAs in eggs and early embryos of the ascidianHalocynthia roretziInvertebrate Reproduction & Development, 1999
- RNA LOCALIZATION IN DEVELOPMENTAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1998
- Expeditions to the pole: RNA localization in andTrends in Cell Biology, 1997
- Chordate Evolution and Autonomous Specification of Cell Fate: The Ascidian Embryo ModelAmerican Zoologist, 1997
- Ectodermal Patterning in Vertebrate EmbryosDevelopmental Biology, 1997
- Signal transduction through beta-catenin and specification of cell fate during embryogenesis.Genes & Development, 1996
- The ascidian embryo as a prototype of vertebrate neurogenesisBioEssays, 1993
- Crystal Structure of a Five-Finger GLI-DNA Complex: New Perspectives on Zinc FingersScience, 1993
- Induction of gut in Caenorhabditis elegans embryosNature, 1992
- A yellow crescent cytoskeletal domain in ascidian eggs and its role in early developmentDevelopmental Biology, 1983