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Pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes

BACKGROUND: Many species form extraembryonic tissues during embryogenesis, such as the placenta of humans and other viviparous mammals. Extraembryonic tissues have various roles in protecting, nourishing and patterning embryos. Prior to gastrulation in zebrafish, the yolk syncytial layer - an extrae...

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Autores principales: Hong, Sung-Kook, Levin, Carly S, Brown, Jamie L, Wan, Haiyan, Sherman, Brad T, Huang, Da Wei, Lempicki, Richard A, Feldman, Benjamin
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2873407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20423468
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-10-42
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author Hong, Sung-Kook
Levin, Carly S
Brown, Jamie L
Wan, Haiyan
Sherman, Brad T
Huang, Da Wei
Lempicki, Richard A
Feldman, Benjamin
author_facet Hong, Sung-Kook
Levin, Carly S
Brown, Jamie L
Wan, Haiyan
Sherman, Brad T
Huang, Da Wei
Lempicki, Richard A
Feldman, Benjamin
author_sort Hong, Sung-Kook
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Many species form extraembryonic tissues during embryogenesis, such as the placenta of humans and other viviparous mammals. Extraembryonic tissues have various roles in protecting, nourishing and patterning embryos. Prior to gastrulation in zebrafish, the yolk syncytial layer - an extraembryonic nuclear syncytium - produces signals that induce mesoderm and endoderm formation. Mesoderm and endoderm precursor cells are situated in the embryonic margin, an external ring of cells along the embryo-yolk interface. The yolk syncytial layer initially forms below the margin, in a domain called the external yolk syncytial layer (E-YSL). RESULTS: We hypothesize that key components of the yolk syncytial layer's mesoderm and endoderm inducing activity are expressed as mRNAs in the E-YSL. To identify genes expressed in the E-YSL, we used microarrays to compare the transcription profiles of intact pre-gastrula embryos with pre-gastrula embryonic cells that we had separated from the yolk and yolk syncytial layer. This identified a cohort of genes with enriched expression in intact embryos. Here we describe our whole mount in situ hybridization analysis of sixty-eight of them. This includes ten genes with E-YSL expression (camsap1l1, gata3, znf503, hnf1ba, slc26a1, slc40a1, gata6, gpr137bb, otop1 and cebpa), four genes with expression in the enveloping layer (EVL), a superficial epithelium that protects the embryo (zgc:136817, zgc:152778, slc14a2 and elovl6l), three EVL genes whose expression is transiently confined to the animal pole (elovl6l, zgc:136359 and clica), and six genes with transient maternal expression (mtf1, wu:fj59f04, mospd2, rftn2, arrdc1a and pho). We also assessed the requirement of Nodal signaling for the expression of selected genes in the E-YSL, EVL and margin. Margin expression was Nodal dependent for all genes we tested, including the concentrated margin expression of an EVL gene: zgc:110712. All other instances of EVL and E-YSL expression that we tested were Nodal independent. CONCLUSION: We have devised an effective strategy for enriching and identifying genes expressed in the E-YSL of pre-gastrula embryos. To our surprise, maternal genes and genes expressed in the EVL were also enriched by this strategy. A number of these genes are promising candidates for future functional studies on early embryonic patterning.
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spelling pubmed-28734072010-05-20 Pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes Hong, Sung-Kook Levin, Carly S Brown, Jamie L Wan, Haiyan Sherman, Brad T Huang, Da Wei Lempicki, Richard A Feldman, Benjamin BMC Dev Biol Research article BACKGROUND: Many species form extraembryonic tissues during embryogenesis, such as the placenta of humans and other viviparous mammals. Extraembryonic tissues have various roles in protecting, nourishing and patterning embryos. Prior to gastrulation in zebrafish, the yolk syncytial layer - an extraembryonic nuclear syncytium - produces signals that induce mesoderm and endoderm formation. Mesoderm and endoderm precursor cells are situated in the embryonic margin, an external ring of cells along the embryo-yolk interface. The yolk syncytial layer initially forms below the margin, in a domain called the external yolk syncytial layer (E-YSL). RESULTS: We hypothesize that key components of the yolk syncytial layer's mesoderm and endoderm inducing activity are expressed as mRNAs in the E-YSL. To identify genes expressed in the E-YSL, we used microarrays to compare the transcription profiles of intact pre-gastrula embryos with pre-gastrula embryonic cells that we had separated from the yolk and yolk syncytial layer. This identified a cohort of genes with enriched expression in intact embryos. Here we describe our whole mount in situ hybridization analysis of sixty-eight of them. This includes ten genes with E-YSL expression (camsap1l1, gata3, znf503, hnf1ba, slc26a1, slc40a1, gata6, gpr137bb, otop1 and cebpa), four genes with expression in the enveloping layer (EVL), a superficial epithelium that protects the embryo (zgc:136817, zgc:152778, slc14a2 and elovl6l), three EVL genes whose expression is transiently confined to the animal pole (elovl6l, zgc:136359 and clica), and six genes with transient maternal expression (mtf1, wu:fj59f04, mospd2, rftn2, arrdc1a and pho). We also assessed the requirement of Nodal signaling for the expression of selected genes in the E-YSL, EVL and margin. Margin expression was Nodal dependent for all genes we tested, including the concentrated margin expression of an EVL gene: zgc:110712. All other instances of EVL and E-YSL expression that we tested were Nodal independent. CONCLUSION: We have devised an effective strategy for enriching and identifying genes expressed in the E-YSL of pre-gastrula embryos. To our surprise, maternal genes and genes expressed in the EVL were also enriched by this strategy. A number of these genes are promising candidates for future functional studies on early embryonic patterning. BioMed Central 2010-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2873407/ /pubmed/20423468 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-10-42 Text en Copyright ©2010 Hong et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Hong, Sung-Kook
Levin, Carly S
Brown, Jamie L
Wan, Haiyan
Sherman, Brad T
Huang, Da Wei
Lempicki, Richard A
Feldman, Benjamin
Pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes
title Pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes
title_full Pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes
title_fullStr Pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes
title_full_unstemmed Pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes
title_short Pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes
title_sort pre-gastrula expression of zebrafish extraembryonic genes
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2873407/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20423468
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-10-42
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