Literature DB >> 28684256

New insights from a high-resolution look at gastrulation in the sea urchin, Lytechinus variegatus.

Megan L Martik1, David R McClay2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Gastrulation is a complex orchestration of movements by cells that are specified early in development. Until now, classical convergent extension was considered to be the main contributor to sea urchin archenteron extension, and the relative contributions of cell divisions were unknown. Active migration of cells along the axis of extension was also not considered as a major factor in invagination.
RESULTS: Cell transplantations plus live imaging were used to examine endoderm cell morphogenesis during gastrulation at high-resolution in the optically clear sea urchin embryo. The invagination sequence was imaged throughout gastrulation. One of the eight macromeres was replaced by a fluorescently labeled macromere at the 32 cell stage. At gastrulation those patches of fluorescent endoderm cell progeny initially about 4 cells wide, released a column of cells about 2 cells wide early in gastrulation and then often this column narrowed to one cell wide by the end of archenteron lengthening. The primary movement of the column of cells was in the direction of elongation of the archenteron with the narrowing (convergence) occurring as one of the two cells moved ahead of its neighbor. As the column narrowed, the labeled endoderm cells generally remained as a contiguous population of cells, rarely separated by intrusion of a lateral unlabeled cell. This longitudinal cell migration mechanism was assessed quantitatively and accounted for almost 90% of the elongation process. Much of the extension was the contribution of Veg2 endoderm with a minor contribution late in gastrulation by Veg1 endoderm cells. We also analyzed the contribution of cell divisions to elongation. Endoderm cells in Lytechinus variagatus were determined to go through approximately one cell doubling during gastrulation. That doubling occurs without a net increase in cell mass, but the question remained as to whether oriented divisions might contribute to archenteron elongation. We learned that indeed there was a biased orientation of cell divisions along the plane of archenteron elongation, but when the impact of that bias was analyzed quantitatively, it contributed a maximum 15% to the total elongation of the gut.
CONCLUSIONS: The major driver of archenteron elongation in the sea urchin, Lytechinus variagatus, is directed movement of Veg2 endoderm cells as a narrowing column along the plane of elongation. The narrowing occurs as cells in the column converge as they migrate, so that the combination of migration and the angular convergence provide the major component of the lengthening. A minor contributor to elongation is oriented cell divisions that contribute to the lengthening but no more than about 15%.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Archenteron; Gastrulation; Sea urchin

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28684256      PMCID: PMC5705275          DOI: 10.1016/j.mod.2017.06.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mech Dev        ISSN: 0925-4773            Impact factor:   1.882


  27 in total

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2.  Target recognition by the archenteron during sea urchin gastrulation.

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Authors:  J D Hardin
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  7 in total

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2.  Developmental single-cell transcriptomics in the Lytechinus variegatus sea urchin embryo.

Authors:  Abdull J Massri; Laura Greenstreet; Anton Afanassiev; Alejandro Berrio; Gregory A Wray; Geoffrey Schiebinger; David R McClay
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Review 3.  Gastrulation in the sea urchin.

Authors:  David R McClay; Jacob Warner; Megan Martik; Esther Miranda; Leslie Slota
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Authors:  Jeff Hardin; Michael Weliky
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5.  Partial exogastrulation due to apical-basal polarity of F-actin distribution disruption in sea urchin embryo by omeprazole.

Authors:  Kaichi Watanabe; Yuhei Yasui; Yuta Kurose; Masashi Fujii; Takashi Yamamoto; Naoaki Sakamoto; Akinori Awazu
Journal:  Genes Cells       Date:  2022-04-09       Impact factor: 2.300

6.  Live imaging of echinoderm embryos to illuminate evo-devo.

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7.  Transcriptomic analysis of sea star development through metamorphosis to the highly derived pentameral body plan with a focus on neural transcription factors.

Authors:  Maria Byrne; Demian Koop; Dario Strbenac; Paula Cisternas; Regina Balogh; Jean Yee Hwa Yang; Phillip L Davidson; Gregory Wray
Journal:  DNA Res       Date:  2020-02-01       Impact factor: 4.458

  7 in total

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