Initiation of vertebrate left–right axis formation by maternal Vg1
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 384 (6604) , 62-65
- https://doi.org/10.1038/384062a0
Abstract
In the development of the three-dimensional vertebrate body plan, the left-right axis is linked to the dorsoventral and anterioposterior axes. In humans, altered left-right development results in severe cardiovascular and visceral abnormalities in individuals and in conjoined twins. Although zygotically transcribed genes that are asymmetrically expressed have been identified, the mechanism by which left-right asymmetries are established during embryogenesis is unknown. Here we show that the Xenopus maternal gene Vg1, a member of the TGF-beta family of cell-signalling molecules which are implicated in dorsoanterior development, initiates left-right axis formation. Altered expression of Vg1 on the right side of 16-cell embryos or disruption of endogenous Vg1 signalling on the left side randomizes cardiac and visceral left-right orientation and alters expression of Xnr-1, a nodal-related molecular marker for left-right development. Furthermore, the orientation of the left-right axis in conjoined twins is dependent upon which cell-signalling molecule initiated twin formation and on whether the secondary axis is on the left or right side of the primary embryonic axis, implicating a molecular pathway leading to the formation of conjoined twins.Keywords
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