Literature DB >> 10419683

Animal-vegetal asymmetries influence the earliest steps in retina fate commitment in Xenopus.

K B Moore1, S A Moody.   

Abstract

An individual retina descends from a restricted and invariant group of nine animal blastomeres at the 32-cell stage. We tested which molecular signaling pathways are responsible for the competence of animal blastomeres to contribute to the retina. Inactivation of activin/Vg1 or fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling by expression of dominant-negative receptors does not prevent an animal blastomere from contributing to the retina. However, increasing bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling in the retina-producing blastomeres significantly reduces their contribution. Conversely, reducing BMP signaling by expression of a dominant-negative BMP receptor or Noggin allows other animal blastomeres to contribute to the retina. Thus, the initial step in the retinal lineage is regulated by position within the BMP/Noggin field of epidermal versus neural induction. Vegetal tier blastomeres, in contrast, cannot contribute to the retina even when given access to the appropriate position and signaling fields by transplantation to the dorsal animal pole. We tested whether expression of molecules within the mesoderm inducing (activin, FGF), mesoderm-modifying (Wnt), or neural-inducing (BMP, Noggin) pathways impart a retinal fate on vegetal cell descendants. None of these, several of which induce secondary head structures, caused vegetal cells to contribute to retina. This was true even if the injected blastomeres were transplanted to the dorsal animal pole. Two pathways that specifically induce head tissues also were investigated. The simultaneous blockade of Wnt and BMP signaling, which results in the formation of a complete secondary axis with head and eyes, did not cause the vegetal clone to give rise to retina. However, Cerberus, a secreted protein that also induces an ectopic head with eyes, redirected vegetal progeny into the retina. These experiments indicate that vegetal blastomere incompetence to express a retinal fate is not due to a lack of components of known signaling pathways, but relies on a specific pathway of head induction. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10419683     DOI: 10.1006/dbio.1999.9338

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Biol        ISSN: 0012-1606            Impact factor:   3.582


  10 in total

1.  Intrinsic bias and lineage restriction in the phenotype determination of dopamine and neuropeptide Y amacrine cells.

Authors:  S A Moody; I Chow; S Huang
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2000-05-01       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  The competence of Xenopus blastomeres to produce neural and retinal progeny is repressed by two endo-mesoderm promoting pathways.

Authors:  Bo Yan; Sally A Moody
Journal:  Dev Biol       Date:  2007-02-07       Impact factor: 3.582

3.  Blastomere explants to test for cell fate commitment during embryonic development.

Authors:  Paaqua A Grant; Mona B Herold; Sally A Moody
Journal:  J Vis Exp       Date:  2013-01-26       Impact factor: 1.355

4.  Autosomal dominant stapes ankylosis with broad thumbs and toes, hyperopia, and skeletal anomalies is caused by heterozygous nonsense and frameshift mutations in NOG, the gene encoding noggin.

Authors:  David J Brown; Theresa B Kim; Elizabeth M Petty; Catherine A Downs; Donna M Martin; Peter J Strouse; Sayoko E Moroi; Jeff M Milunsky; Marci M Lesperance
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2002-06-27       Impact factor: 11.025

5.  Fibroblast growth factor receptor-induced phosphorylation of ephrinB1 modulates its interaction with Dishevelled.

Authors:  Hyun-Shik Lee; Kathleen Mood; Gopala Battu; Yon Ju Ji; Arvinder Singh; Ira O Daar
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2008-11-12       Impact factor: 4.138

Review 6.  The Birth of the Eye Vesicle: When Fate Decision Equals Morphogenesis.

Authors:  Florence A Giger; Corinne Houart
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 4.677

Review 7.  Jack of all trades, master of each: the diversity of fibroblast growth factor signalling in eye development.

Authors:  Neoklis Makrides; Qian Wang; Chenqi Tao; Samuel Schwartz; Xin Zhang
Journal:  Open Biol       Date:  2022-01-12       Impact factor: 6.411

8.  Generation of functional eyes from pluripotent cells.

Authors:  Andrea S Viczian; Eduardo C Solessio; Yung Lyou; Michael E Zuber
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2009-08-18       Impact factor: 8.029

9.  Efficient retina formation requires suppression of both Activin and BMP signaling pathways in pluripotent cells.

Authors:  Kimberly A Wong; Michael Trembley; Syafiq Abd Wahab; Andrea S Viczian
Journal:  Biol Open       Date:  2015-03-06       Impact factor: 2.422

10.  Sprouty2 regulates positioning of retinal progenitors through suppressing the Ras/Raf/MAPK pathway.

Authors:  Jian Sun; Jaeho Yoon; Moonsup Lee; Yoo-Seok Hwang; Ira O Daar
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-08-13       Impact factor: 4.996

  10 in total

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