Literature DB >> 17227366

Gene expression patterns in a novel animal appendage: the sea urchin pluteus arm.

Alan C Love1, Mary E Andrews, Rudolf A Raff.   

Abstract

The larval arms of echinoid plutei are used for locomotion and feeding. They are composed of internal calcite skeletal rods covered by an ectoderm layer bearing a ciliary band. Skeletogenesis includes an autonomous molecular differentiation program in primary mesenchyme cells (PMCs), initiated when PMCs leave the vegetal plate for the blastocoel, and a patterning of the differentiated skeletal units that requires molecular cues from the overlaying ectoderm. The arms represent a larval feature that arose in the echinoid lineage during the Paleozoic and offers a subject for the study of gene co-option in the evolution of novel larval features. We isolated new molecular markers in two closely related but differently developing species, Heliocidaris tuberculata and Heliocidaris erythrogramma. We report the expression of a larval arm-associated ectoderm gene tetraspanin, as well as two new PMC markers, advillin and carbonic anhydrase. Tetraspanin localizes to the animal half of blastula stage H. tuberculata and then undergoes a restriction into the putative oral ectoderm and future location of the postoral arms, where it continues to be expressed at the leading edge of both the postoral and anterolateral arms. In H. erythrogramma, its expression initiates in the animal half of blastulae and expands over the entire ectoderm from gastrulation onward. Advillin and carbonic anhydrase are upregulated in the PMCs postgastrulation and localized to the leading edge of the growing larval arms of H. tuberculata but do not exhibit coordinated expression in H. erythrogramma larvae. The tight spatiotemporal regulation of these genes in H. tuberculata along with other ontogenetic and phylogenetic evidence suggest that pluteus arms are novel larval organs, distinguishable from the processes of skeletogenesis per se. The dissociation of expression control in H. erythrogramma suggest that coordinate gene expression in H. tuberculata evolved as part of the evolution of pluteus arms, and is not required for larval or adult development.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17227366     DOI: 10.1111/j.1525-142X.2006.00137.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evol Dev        ISSN: 1520-541X            Impact factor:   1.930


  6 in total

Review 1.  Origins of the other metazoan body plans: the evolution of larval forms.

Authors:  Rudolf A Raff
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2008-04-27       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 2.  Idealization in evolutionary developmental investigation: a tension between phenotypic plasticity and normal stages.

Authors:  Alan C Love
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2010-02-27       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  Characterization of an Alpha Type Carbonic Anhydrase from Paracentrotus lividus Sea Urchin Embryos.

Authors:  Konstantinos Karakostis; Caterina Costa; Francesca Zito; Franz Brümmer; Valeria Matranga
Journal:  Mar Biotechnol (NY)       Date:  2016-05-26       Impact factor: 3.619

4.  Biomineral ultrastructure, elemental constitution and genomic analysis of biomineralization-related proteins in hemichordates.

Authors:  C B Cameron; C D Bishop
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2012-04-11       Impact factor: 5.349

5.  Extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity promotes a carbon concentration mechanism in metazoan calcifying cells.

Authors:  Ann-Sophie Matt; William W Chang; Marian Y Hu
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-09-26       Impact factor: 12.779

6.  Evolution and function of a cis-regulatory module for mesophyll-specific gene expression in the C4 dicot Flaveria trinervia.

Authors:  Meryem Akyildiz; Udo Gowik; Sascha Engelmann; Maria Koczor; Monika Streubel; Peter Westhoff
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2007-11-09       Impact factor: 11.277

  6 in total

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