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The Spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species

The dorsal blastopore lip (known as the Spemann organizer) is important for making the body plan in amphibian gastrulation. The organizer is believed to involute inward and migrate animally to make physical contact with the prospective head neuroectoderm at the blastocoel roof of mid- to late-gastru...

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Autores principales: Yanagi, Takanori, Ito, Kenta, Nishihara, Akiha, Minamino, Reika, Mori, Shoko, Sumida, Masayuki, Hashimoto, Chikara
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4402005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25754292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dgd.12200
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author Yanagi, Takanori
Ito, Kenta
Nishihara, Akiha
Minamino, Reika
Mori, Shoko
Sumida, Masayuki
Hashimoto, Chikara
author_facet Yanagi, Takanori
Ito, Kenta
Nishihara, Akiha
Minamino, Reika
Mori, Shoko
Sumida, Masayuki
Hashimoto, Chikara
author_sort Yanagi, Takanori
collection PubMed
description The dorsal blastopore lip (known as the Spemann organizer) is important for making the body plan in amphibian gastrulation. The organizer is believed to involute inward and migrate animally to make physical contact with the prospective head neuroectoderm at the blastocoel roof of mid- to late-gastrula. However, we found that this physical contact was already established at the equatorial region of very early gastrula in a wide variety of amphibian species. Here we propose a unified model of amphibian gastrulation movement. In the model, the organizer is present at the blastocoel roof of blastulae, moves vegetally to locate at the region that lies from the blastocoel floor to the dorsal lip at the onset of gastrulation. The organizer located at the blastocoel floor contributes to the anterior axial mesoderm including the prechordal plate, and the organizer at the dorsal lip ends up as the posterior axial mesoderm. During the early step of gastrulation, the anterior organizer moves to establish the physical contact with the prospective neuroectoderm through the “subduction and zippering” movements. Subduction makes a trench between the anterior organizer and the prospective neuroectoderm, and the tissues face each other via the trench. Zippering movement, with forming Brachet's cleft, gradually closes the gap to establish the contact between them. The contact is completed at the equator of early gastrulae and it continues throughout the gastrulation. After the contact is established, the dorsal axis is formed posteriorly, but not anteriorly. The model also implies the possibility of constructing a common model of gastrulation among chordate species.
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spelling pubmed-44020052015-04-22 The Spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species Yanagi, Takanori Ito, Kenta Nishihara, Akiha Minamino, Reika Mori, Shoko Sumida, Masayuki Hashimoto, Chikara Dev Growth Differ Original Articles The dorsal blastopore lip (known as the Spemann organizer) is important for making the body plan in amphibian gastrulation. The organizer is believed to involute inward and migrate animally to make physical contact with the prospective head neuroectoderm at the blastocoel roof of mid- to late-gastrula. However, we found that this physical contact was already established at the equatorial region of very early gastrula in a wide variety of amphibian species. Here we propose a unified model of amphibian gastrulation movement. In the model, the organizer is present at the blastocoel roof of blastulae, moves vegetally to locate at the region that lies from the blastocoel floor to the dorsal lip at the onset of gastrulation. The organizer located at the blastocoel floor contributes to the anterior axial mesoderm including the prechordal plate, and the organizer at the dorsal lip ends up as the posterior axial mesoderm. During the early step of gastrulation, the anterior organizer moves to establish the physical contact with the prospective neuroectoderm through the “subduction and zippering” movements. Subduction makes a trench between the anterior organizer and the prospective neuroectoderm, and the tissues face each other via the trench. Zippering movement, with forming Brachet's cleft, gradually closes the gap to establish the contact between them. The contact is completed at the equator of early gastrulae and it continues throughout the gastrulation. After the contact is established, the dorsal axis is formed posteriorly, but not anteriorly. The model also implies the possibility of constructing a common model of gastrulation among chordate species. BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2015-04 2015-03-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4402005/ /pubmed/25754292 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dgd.12200 Text en © 2015 The Authors Development, Growth & Differentiation published by Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd on behalf of Japanese Society of Developmental Biologists. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Yanagi, Takanori
Ito, Kenta
Nishihara, Akiha
Minamino, Reika
Mori, Shoko
Sumida, Masayuki
Hashimoto, Chikara
The Spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species
title The Spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species
title_full The Spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species
title_fullStr The Spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species
title_full_unstemmed The Spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species
title_short The Spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species
title_sort spemann organizer meets the anterior-most neuroectoderm at the equator of early gastrulae in amphibian species
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4402005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25754292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dgd.12200
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