| Literature DB >> 22270538 |
Abstract
Components of purinergic signalling are expressed in the early embryo raising the possibility that ATP, ADP and adenosine may contribute to the mechanisms of embryonic development. We summarize the available data from four developmental models-mouse, chick, Xenopus and zebrafish. While there are some notable examples where purinergic signalling is indeed important during development, e.g. development of the eye in the frog, it is puzzling that deletion of single components of purinergic signalling often results in rather minor developmental phenotypes. We suggest that a key step in further analysis is to perform combinatorial alterations of expression of purinergic signalling components to uncover their roles in development. We introduce the concept that purinergic signalling could create novel morphogenetic fields to encode spatial location via the concentration of ATP, ADP and adenosine. We show that using minimal assumptions and the known properties of the ectonucleotidases, complex spatial patterns of ATP and adenosine can be set up. These patterns may provide a new way to assess the potential of purinergic signalling in developmental processes.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22270538 PMCID: PMC3360092 DOI: 10.1007/s11302-012-9290-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Purinergic Signal ISSN: 1573-9538 Impact factor: 3.765
Fig. 1Comparative embryogenesis of the mouse, chick, Xenopus and zebrafish. After fertilization (F), these four vertebrates undergo similar phases during their embryonic life. Species-specific stages are indicated on the figure. Briefly, Mouse embryos will implant (imp) at E4.5, after formation of the blastocyst and separation between the epiblast (or primitive ectoderm), at the origin of the embryo, and the cells which will give rise to the extra embryonic structures, the trophoectoderm and the primitive endoderm. The turning process, at E9, allows the establishment of the dorsal and ventral axis. The organogenesis is followed by the embryonic or foetal growth phase and birth takes place between 18 to 21 days after fertilization, depending on the mouse strain. The cleavage phase of the Chick embryos takes place in the hen oviduct. After laying, gastrulation and neurulation are complete in 2 days and stage HH14 is characterized by the existence of 22 somites. Feather germs appear at stage HH30 and organogenesis and embryo growth continue till hatching 22 days after fertilization. Cleavage of Xenopus embryos will be complete by stage 9, blastula stage and neurulation starts at stage 12.5 and ends at stage 20. First somite is formed at stage 17. Organogenesis is the longest phase, characterized by the hatching of the embryos from their vitelline membrane around stage 25. After stage 45, the tadpole will start feeding and will undergo the metamorphosis phase before becoming an adult frog. Zebrafish embryos display the quickest embryonic life cycle. Cleavage divisions lead to the formation of a blastoderm lying over the yolk, at the sphere stage, 4 h after fertilization. Gastrulation starts 5.5 h after fertilization, at the shield stage and is complete only 4.5 h later. Somite formation and neurulation follow during the segmentation period. Organogenesis then takes place during the pharyngula period, less than 24 h after fertilization, and zebrafish embryo usually hatches 48 to 72 h after fertilization. The term larva is being arbitrarily used after the end of the third day, whether the hatching has taken place or not
Characteristics, advantages and disadvantages of the four major vertebrate model organisms
| Chick | Mouse |
| Zebrafish | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Development | Internal (oviduct for cleavage stage)/external | In utero | External | External |
| Developmental specificity | Early development like mammals (primitive streak) | Mammalian | Metamorphosis | Early development phases quite different to other vertebrates. |
| Developmental cycle length | 22 days | 18–21 days | 4 days (at 23°C), temperature dependent | 2–3 days |
| Offspring | <10 | <10 | 103 | 102 |
| Oocyte size (diameter) | 2.5 cm | 80–100 μm | 1.2–1.4 mm | 0.7 mm |
| Maintenance and breeding | Easy but need to obtain laid eggs | Difficult and expensive | Very easy | Very easy |
| Manipulative embryology | Access through the egg shell (graft, beads implantation) | Only for embryos up to blastocyst stage but need to be re-implanted | Microsurgery, graft, fate mapping | Microsurgery, fate mapping |
| Genome | Sequenced (1.2 × 109) | Sequenced (3 × 109) | Tetraploid genome not yet sequenced but | Sequenced (1.7 × 109) duplicated genome |
| Genetics based techniques | Spontaneous mutations, gene silencing (RNAi), electroporation, transgenic animal (lentivirus), ES cells | Electroporation, KO, KI, conditional transgenesis | Gene silencing (MO), gain of functions (injection RNA, protein, DNA), transgenic animal (REMI) | KO, gene silencing and gain of functions as |
| Screens | Mutation screens (but costly and difficult) | Mutation screens | Pharmacological and mutation screens | Pharmacological and mutation screens |
| Specific advantages | Chimera | ES cells, iPS | Targeted injections, high resistance to infections | Transparency of embryos |
| Website | MGI | Xenbase | ZFIN |
ES embryonic cells, iPS induced pluripotent cells, KO knock-out, KI knock-in, MO morpholino oligonucleotide, REMI restriction enzyme-mediated insertion
Fig. 2Temporal pattern of expression of the purinergic signalling components in mouse, chick, Xenopus and zebrafish embryos. The extent of expression of purinergic receptors and ectonucleotidases is mapped along the major phases of embryogenesis, cleavage, gastrulation, neurulation and organogenesis and embryo growth that have been normalized in duration for the four model organisms to allow easier comparison. The expression of some of these genes has only been described at one stage (indicated by arrows). EST expression data is indicated by blue dashed lines and corresponding gene names in blue. The expression of mouse genes published in [25] or [26] as part of the embryonic mouse database and atlas of gene expression are indicated by solid blue lines. The murine P2Y1 expression by in situ hybridization is available on the MGI website
Expression patterns of purinergic signalling components in rodents, Xenopus, zebrafish and chick embryos
| Gene | Detection methods | Expression domains | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rodents | |||
| A1 | ISH (rat) | Heart, neural tissues, kidney | [ |
| A2A | ISH (mouse) | Neural tissues | [ |
| A2B | ISH (mouse) | Neural tissues | [ |
| A3 | ISH (mouse) | Aorta and heart | [ |
| P2X family | RT-PCR (rat) | Distinct expression profile in developing brain | [ |
| P2X family | RT-PCR (rat) | P2X2, 3, 4 and 7 in developing inner ear tissues | [ |
| P2X1 | Immunostaining/ISH RT/PCR (mouse) | In the pancreas, liver, gut, bladder and aorta | [ |
| P2X2 | ISH (mouse) | Nervous system (brain and ganglia) | [ |
| P2X3 | Immunostaining (mouse) | Neuronal (sensory ganglia) and non neuronal tissues | [ |
| Microarray/RTqPCR | Higher in blastocysts than morula and 4-cell stages | ||
| P2X2/P2X3 | Immunostaining (rat) | P2X3 from E11, P2X2 from E14. In NS and non neuronal tissues (kidney) | [ |
| P2X4 | ISH (mouse) | Brain, nose, skin, muscle, skeleton | [ |
| P2X2, 5 and 6 | Immunostaining (rat) | In developing skeletal muscle tissues | [ |
| P2X7 | Immunostaining (rat) | In developing pancreas | [ |
| P2X7 | ISH (mouse) | No regional signal | [ |
| P2Y1 | RT-PCR (mouse) | Entire embryo pool | [ |
| P2Y2 | ISH (mouse) | No regional signal | [ |
| P2Y6 | ISH (mouse) | No regional signal | [ |
| ENTPD2 | ISH (mouse) | Ganglia and PNS | [ |
| ENTPD3 | ISH (mouse) | Wide expression | [ |
| ENPP1 | ISH (mouse) | Nervous system, Tooth | [ |
| ENPP2 | ISH (mouse) | Nervous system and various organ primordia | [ |
| 5′NT | ISH (mouse) | Mesenchyme | [ |
| TNAP | RT-PCR/ISH/immunostaining/histochemical (mouse) | Early phases; brain precursor cells; skeleton | [ |
| EAP | RT-PCR | Restricted to early phases (until blastocyst) | [ |
|
| |||
| A1 | Electrophysiology, pharmacology | Spinal cord | [ |
| A2A | ISH | Somites and eyes. | [ |
| P2Y1 | ISH/Northern blot | Brain, spinal cord, eyes, somites | [ |
| RT-PCR | From cleavage stages. | K. Massé and N. Dale, unpublished data | |
| P2Y8 | Northern blot/ISH | Neural tissue | [ |
| P2Y11 | RT-PCR/ISH | Mesoderm and derivatives, nervous system, placodes | [ |
| ENTPD family | RT-PCR/ISH | Distinct expression profile for ENTPD1,2 and 3 | [ |
| ENPP family | RT-PCR/ISH | Distinct expression profile for ENNP1, 2a, 2b and 3 | [ |
| Zebrafish | |||
| A2A, 2B | ISH | Distinct expression pattern; 2 A2 receptors | [ |
| P2X3 | ISH | From 6-somite stages, Rohon beard neurons | [ |
| P2X family | ISH | P2X1, P2X3.1, P2X3.2, P2X4.2, P2X8 are expressed but P2X5, P2X7 are not expressed in neural tissues. | [ |
| P2X3.1/P2X3.2 | ISH | Restricted pattern in sensory neurons | [ |
| ENTPD3 | ISH | Brain and spinal cord (Rohon beard neurons) | [ |
| Chick | |||
| A1 | RTqPCR | In Hensen's node and heart primordia (HH4) | [ |
| A3 | RT-PCR (adult) | Brain and muscle | [ |
| P2X1 | Northern blot | Highest expression in lung, none in brain and eyes | [ |
| P2X4 | RT-PCR | In brain and heart tissues, from day4 (HH23) | [ |
| P2X5 | ISH/Northern blot | somites, heart, brain | [ |
| P2X5/P2X6 | Immunostaining | Muscle and only P2X5 in nervous system | [ |
| P2X5 | ISH/Northern blot | Nervous system, eye, heart, digestive tract and muscle | [ |
| P2Y1 | Northern blot | spinal cord and muscle | [ |
| Northern blot/ISH | Mesoderm derivatives and CNS | [ | |
| ENPP2 | ISH | NS, somites, limb bud. | [ |
Gene duplication events have been described in Xenopus and zebrafish for enpp2 and the P2X family, giving rise to extra subtypes of these genes
ISH in situ hybridization, CNS central nervous system, PNS peripheral nervous system
Components of purinergic signalling that are not expressed at some or all stages of vertebrate embryogenesis
| Gene | Method | Stages | References/Websites |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | |||
| A3 | ISH | E8.5, E12.5 | [ |
| P2X5 | ISH/EST | E14.5 | [ |
| P2Y12 | ISH | E14.5 | [ |
| P2Y13 | ISH | E14.5 | [ |
| P2Y14 | ISH/EST | E14.5 | [ |
| PAP | ISH | E14.5 | [ |
|
| |||
| ENTPD8 | RT/PCR | All stages | [ |
| ENTPD1,3 | RT/PCR | Before end of neurulation | [ |
| ENTPD2 | RT/PCR | Before gastrulation | [ |
| P2Y8 | Northern blot | Before neurulation | [ |
| P2Y11 | RT/PCR | Before gastrulation | [ |
| Zebrafish | |||
| P2X2, P2X4.1 | ISH | 24 and 48 hpf | [ |
| ENTPD3 | ISH | Before 23hpf | [ |
| Chick | |||
| P2X5 | ISH | At stage HH11 | [ |
Phenotypes of mutants with disrupted purinergic signalling
| Gene | Studies | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | |||
| A1 KO | Behavioural/Physiological | Increase of aggressiveness; defects in TGF | [ |
| A2A KO | Behavioural/Physiological/histological | Increase of aggressiveness and blood pressure; Neuroprotection, No neuronal developmental defects | [ |
| A2B KO | Physiological | Inflammation responses | [ |
| A3 KO | Physiological | Defects in inflammatory responses. | [ |
| P2X1 KO | Physiological | Male infertility | [ |
| P2X2 KO | Physiological/Behavioural/ | No gross phenotype | [ |
| P2X3 KO | Physiological | Defects in pain responses and bladder function | [ |
| Behavioural | |||
| P2X2/P2X3 KO | Physiological/behavioural | Lethal (at P7) and defects in sensory response | [ |
| P2X4 KO | Physiological | Defects in vascular tone and remodelling; Defects in synaptic potentiation; involvement in recruited macrophages | [ |
| P2X7 KO | Physiological | Defects in cytokine production, in pain response | [ |
| P2Y1 KO | Physiological | Defects in platelet aggregation and thrombosis | [ |
| P2Y2 KO | Physiological (isolated cells or organs) | Defects in calcium and chloride transport | [ |
| P2Y4 KO | Physiological (isolated organs) | Defects in chloride transport | [ |
| P2Y6 KO | Physiological (isolated cells and trachea) | Defects in UDP response in macrophages, VSM and endothelial cells. | [ |
| P2Y12 KO | Physiological | Defects in platelet thrombosis | [ |
| P2Y13 KO | Physiological | Defects in cholesterol metabolism | [ |
| P2Y14 KO | Physiological | Defects in stomach muscle contractility | [ |
| ENTPD1 KO | Physiological | Defects in hemostasis and thromboregulation | [ |
| 5′-NT KO | Physiological (in vivo and isolated cells or nephrons) | Defects in TGF | [ |
| ENPP1 | ENU mutagenesis | Defects in mineralization and calcification | [ |
| ENPP1 | Spontaneous mutation | Defects in ossification | [ |
| ENPP2 KO | Developmental | Lethal (E9.5), defects in neural system and vascular development | [ |
| PAP KO | Physiological | Increase of nociceptive responses | [ |
| TNAP KO | Developmental | Lethal(before weaning) Defects in bone mineralization and neural tube abnormalities | [ |
| EAP KO | Developmental | Delay in development; blastocyst degeneration; reduction in litter size | [ |
| A1 KI (cardiac promoter) | Physiological | Lethal (between 6 and 12 weeks) congestive heart failure | [ |
| A3 KI (muscle promoter) | Histological | Lethal (before E8.5) | [ |
| Adenosine | In vitro culture | Blocks development at the 2-cell stage. | [ |
|
| |||
| MO ENTPD2 | Developmental | Loss of eye | [ |
| MO P2Y1 | |||
| P1 receptor agonists | Developmental | Defects in somite formation; reduction of myoD expression | [ |
| P1 receptor antagonists | Pharmacological screen | Defects in angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis | [ |
| P2 receptor antagonists | Developmental | Defects in gastrulation, formation of ventralized embryos | [ |
| Zebrafish | |||
| MO P2X3.1 | Developmental | Defects in craniofacial development and sensory circuit formation | [ |
| Chick | |||
| P1 receptor agonists | Developmental | Defects in heart looping | [ |
| Adenosine | Physiological | Defects in vascular development | [ |
| Other organisms | |||
| Starfish | |||
| Adenosine | Developmental | Blocks development at the 256-cell stage. | [ |
|
| |||
| Quintuple dP2X KO | Disruption of intracellular calcium signalling | [ | |
| dP2X KO | Defects of osmoregulation | [ | |
For mouse, only papers referring to mouse transgenic generation are listed
KO knock-out, KI knock-in, MO morpholino antisense oligonucleotide knock down of expression, TGF tubuloglomerular feedback, VSM vascular smooth muscle
Fig. 3Simulation of diffusion and metabolism of ATP—a complex purinergic morphogenetic field. The simulation (values shown at T = 5 s after beginning) shows that ATP and ADP are locally high in concentration over the first 30–40 μm, but that adenosine peaks at around 60 μm and remains high in concentration up to around 120 μm. Thus a complex pattern is produced where the potential for ATP/ADP actions is bounded and limited by a zone where adenosinergic actions have the potential to predominate. The simulation considers a short strip of cells (inset) where one cell at the end releases ATP; the ATP is then converted successively through the intervening intermediates to adenosine, with feed-forward inhibition of the final step mediated by ATP and ADP (inset top). All the metabolites diffuse along the strip with the same diffusion coefficient (300 μm2/s). The conversion of ATP and metabolites are described by Michaelis–Menten kinetics, based on literature values [93–95]: ATP, Km 33.3 μM, Vmax, 100 μM/s; ADP, Km 9.5 μM, Vmax 20 μM/s; AMP, Km 0.94 μM, Vmax, 20 μM/s; both ATP and ADP inhibit the conversion of AMP to adenosine (Ado) with a ki of 0.1 μM. The simulation is based on the following parallel linked equations: ∂[ATP]/∂t = D ∂2[ATP]/∂x 2 − k1[ATP]; ∂[ADP]/∂t = D ∂2[ADP]/∂x 2 + k1[ATP] − k2[ADP]; ∂[AMP]/∂t = D ∂2[AMP]/∂x 2 + k2[ADP] − k3.ki[AMP]; and ∂[Ado]/∂t = D ∂2[Ado]/∂x 2 + k3.ki[AMP]. Where D is the diffusion coefficient, and k1, k2 and k3 are rates based on the Michaelis–Menten kinetics given above. These equations were solved numerically using code written for Matlab. We thank Dr. Magnus Richardson for assisting us with this code