| Literature DB >> 32754601 |
Masafumi Inaba1, Cheng-Ming Chuong1.
Abstract
Animal color patterns are of interest to many fields, such as developmental biology, evolutionary biology, ethology, mathematical biology, bio-mimetics, etc. The skin provides easy access to experimentation and analysis enabling the developmental pigment patterning process to be analyzed at the cellular and molecular level. Studies in animals with distinct pigment patterns (such as zebrafish, horse, feline, etc.) have revealed some genetic information underlying color pattern formation. Yet, how the complex pigment patterns in diverse avian species are established remains an open question. Here we summarize recent progress. Avian plumage shows color patterns occurring at different spatial levels. The two main levels are macro- (across the body) and micro- (within a feather) pigment patterns. At the cellular level, colors are mainly produced by melanocytes generating eumelanin (black) and pheomelanin (yellow, orange). These melanin-based patterns are regulated by melanocyte migration, differentiation, cell death, and/or interaction with neighboring skin cells. In addition, non-melanin chemical pigments and structural colors add more colors to the available palette in different cell types or skin regions. We discuss classic and recent tissue transplantation experiments that explore the avian pigment patterning process and some potential molecular mechanisms. We find color patterns can be controlled autonomously by melanocytes but also non-autonomously by dermal cells. Complex plumage color patterns are generated by the combination of these multi-scale patterning mechanisms. These interactions can be further modulated by environmental factors such as sex hormones, which generate striking sexual dimorphic colors in avian integuments and can also be influenced by seasons and aging.Entities:
Keywords: Evo-Devo; color; integument; melanocyte; morphogenesis; regional specificity; skin appendages; stripes
Year: 2020 PMID: 32754601 PMCID: PMC7365947 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Macro- (across the body or within a skin domain) and micro (within a feather) color patterns in the bird. (A) Color patterns across the whole body. Upper: a male golden pheasant. Lower: a schematic drawing showing a typical whole color pattern in birds. (B) Pigment patterns within domains. Upper: pigment patterns on the head in an E12 Sicilian Buttercup chicken (SC) and E16 Mallard duck (MD). Lower: distinct pigment stripe patterns in E10 Japanese quail (JQ) back skin and E13 Bobwhite quail (BQ). (C) Diversity of pigment patterns within a feather. Photos by M. Inaba.
FIGURE 2Putative molecular mechanisms in macro- and micro-pigment pattern formation. (A) The embryonic development of Japanese quail skin (Left). Neural crest cells (NCCs) delaminate from the dorsal part of the neural tube (NT). Some NCCs differentiate into melanoblasts and emigrate to their destination in the epidermis (Epi). A part of the somite (So) differentiates to dermis (Der). Dermal cells in the vicinity of melanocytes secrete ASIP to switch the melanin synthesis pathway from eumelanin to pheomelanin. Dermal cell–melanocyte interactions confer striped pigment patterns (Lower) (Haupaix et al., 2018). In addition, melanocytes interact with each other via connexin40 (blue arrows) to refine the size of the pigmentation stripes (Inaba et al., 2019b). (B) Schematic drawing of a feather follicle. Melanocytes are located within barb ridges and transport its melanosome into adjacent keratinocytes (Lin et al., 2013). (C–E) Schematic drawing showing that interactions between melanocytes and their environments (dermis/epidermis) form a variety of feather pigment patterns. (C) Melanocyte intrinsic banded pigment pattern. Cyclic maturation of the progenitor cells gives rise to banded pigment patterns on the feather vane. To accomplish this oscillation, negative feedback from mature melanocytes to active progenitors and transit amplifying cells (TA) is assumed. (D) Dermal cell instructive pigment pattern. ASIP is expressed in either side of the anterior or posterior pulp comprised of dermal cells, leading edge, or central pigmented patterns (Lin et al., 2013). (E) Feather keratinocytes can confer the pigmentation. MuPKS, polyketide synthase, is expressed in barb ridges and deposits yellow psittacofulvin pigments (Cooke et al., 2017).