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Dynamic Coupling of Pattern Formation and Morphogenesis in the Developing Vertebrate Retina

During embryonic development, pattern formation must be tightly synchronized with tissue morphogenesis to coordinate the establishment of the spatial identities of cells with their movements. In the vertebrate retina, patterning along the dorsal-ventral and nasal-temporal (anterior-posterior) axes i...

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Autores principales: Picker, Alexander, Cavodeassi, Florencia, Machate, Anja, Bernauer, Sabine, Hans, Stefan, Abe, Gembu, Kawakami, Koichi, Wilson, Stephen W., Brand, Michael
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2751823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19823566
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000214
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author Picker, Alexander
Cavodeassi, Florencia
Machate, Anja
Bernauer, Sabine
Hans, Stefan
Abe, Gembu
Kawakami, Koichi
Wilson, Stephen W.
Brand, Michael
author_facet Picker, Alexander
Cavodeassi, Florencia
Machate, Anja
Bernauer, Sabine
Hans, Stefan
Abe, Gembu
Kawakami, Koichi
Wilson, Stephen W.
Brand, Michael
author_sort Picker, Alexander
collection PubMed
description During embryonic development, pattern formation must be tightly synchronized with tissue morphogenesis to coordinate the establishment of the spatial identities of cells with their movements. In the vertebrate retina, patterning along the dorsal-ventral and nasal-temporal (anterior-posterior) axes is required for correct spatial representation in the retinotectal map. However, it is unknown how specification of axial cell positions in the retina occurs during the complex process of early eye morphogenesis. Studying zebrafish embryos, we show that morphogenetic tissue rearrangements during eye evagination result in progenitor cells in the nasal half of the retina primordium being brought into proximity to the sources of three fibroblast growth factors, Fgf8/3/24, outside the eye. Triple-mutant analysis shows that this combined Fgf signal fully controls nasal retina identity by regulating the nasal transcription factor Foxg1. Surprisingly, nasal-temporal axis specification occurs very early along the dorsal-ventral axis of the evaginating eye. By in vivo imaging GFP-tagged retinal progenitor cells, we find that subsequent eye morphogenesis requires gradual tissue compaction in the nasal half and directed cell movements into the temporal half of the retina. Balancing these processes drives the progressive alignment of the nasal-temporal retina axis with the anterior-posterior body axis and is controlled by a feed-forward effect of Fgf signaling on Foxg1-mediated cell cohesion. Thus, the mechanistic coupling and dynamic synchronization of tissue patterning with morphogenetic cell behavior through Fgf signaling leads to the graded allocation of cell positional identity in the eye, underlying retinotectal map formation.
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spelling pubmed-27518232009-10-13 Dynamic Coupling of Pattern Formation and Morphogenesis in the Developing Vertebrate Retina Picker, Alexander Cavodeassi, Florencia Machate, Anja Bernauer, Sabine Hans, Stefan Abe, Gembu Kawakami, Koichi Wilson, Stephen W. Brand, Michael PLoS Biol Research Article During embryonic development, pattern formation must be tightly synchronized with tissue morphogenesis to coordinate the establishment of the spatial identities of cells with their movements. In the vertebrate retina, patterning along the dorsal-ventral and nasal-temporal (anterior-posterior) axes is required for correct spatial representation in the retinotectal map. However, it is unknown how specification of axial cell positions in the retina occurs during the complex process of early eye morphogenesis. Studying zebrafish embryos, we show that morphogenetic tissue rearrangements during eye evagination result in progenitor cells in the nasal half of the retina primordium being brought into proximity to the sources of three fibroblast growth factors, Fgf8/3/24, outside the eye. Triple-mutant analysis shows that this combined Fgf signal fully controls nasal retina identity by regulating the nasal transcription factor Foxg1. Surprisingly, nasal-temporal axis specification occurs very early along the dorsal-ventral axis of the evaginating eye. By in vivo imaging GFP-tagged retinal progenitor cells, we find that subsequent eye morphogenesis requires gradual tissue compaction in the nasal half and directed cell movements into the temporal half of the retina. Balancing these processes drives the progressive alignment of the nasal-temporal retina axis with the anterior-posterior body axis and is controlled by a feed-forward effect of Fgf signaling on Foxg1-mediated cell cohesion. Thus, the mechanistic coupling and dynamic synchronization of tissue patterning with morphogenetic cell behavior through Fgf signaling leads to the graded allocation of cell positional identity in the eye, underlying retinotectal map formation. Public Library of Science 2009-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC2751823/ /pubmed/19823566 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000214 Text en Picker et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Picker, Alexander
Cavodeassi, Florencia
Machate, Anja
Bernauer, Sabine
Hans, Stefan
Abe, Gembu
Kawakami, Koichi
Wilson, Stephen W.
Brand, Michael
Dynamic Coupling of Pattern Formation and Morphogenesis in the Developing Vertebrate Retina
title Dynamic Coupling of Pattern Formation and Morphogenesis in the Developing Vertebrate Retina
title_full Dynamic Coupling of Pattern Formation and Morphogenesis in the Developing Vertebrate Retina
title_fullStr Dynamic Coupling of Pattern Formation and Morphogenesis in the Developing Vertebrate Retina
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic Coupling of Pattern Formation and Morphogenesis in the Developing Vertebrate Retina
title_short Dynamic Coupling of Pattern Formation and Morphogenesis in the Developing Vertebrate Retina
title_sort dynamic coupling of pattern formation and morphogenesis in the developing vertebrate retina
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2751823/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19823566
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000214
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