| Literature DB >> 33981708 |
Stephanie Bertrand1, João E Carvalho2, Delphine Dauga3, Nicolas Matentzoglu4, Vladimir Daric1, Jr-Kai Yu5,6, Michael Schubert2, Hector Escrivá1.
Abstract
An ontology is a computable representation of the different parts of an organism and its different developmental stages as well as the relationships between them. The ontology of model organisms is therefore a fundamental tool for a multitude of bioinformatics and comparative analyses. The cephalochordate amphioxus is a marine animal representing the earliest diverging evolutionary lineage of chordates. Furthermore, its morphology, its anatomy and its genome can be considered as prototypes of the chordate phylum. For these reasons, amphioxus is a very important animal model for evolutionary developmental biology studies aimed at understanding the origin and diversification of vertebrates. Here, we have constructed an amphioxus ontology (AMPHX) which combines anatomical and developmental terms and includes the relationships between these terms. AMPHX will be used to annotate amphioxus gene expression patterns as well as phenotypes. We encourage the scientific community to adopt this amphioxus ontology and send recommendations for future updates and improvements.Entities:
Keywords: amphioxus (lancelet); anatomy; cephalochordates; evodevo model organisms; life cycle; ontology (ontologie)
Year: 2021 PMID: 33981708 PMCID: PMC8107275 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.668025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1The amphioxus life cycle. The ten developmental periods defined in AMPHX are indicated. Periods between zygote and metamorphosis are planktonic. The juvenile and adult periods are benthic. The size of the Branchiostoma lanceolatum embryos and larvae ranges from 80 to 100 μm in the zygote and early embryonic stages to several millimeters in the larval stages. Metamorphosis occurs in larvae with sizes of between 5 and 7 mm. Juveniles range in size from 5–7 mm to 3 cm and adults from 3 to 8 cm. Illustrations from zygote to larva periods have been adapted from Carvalho et al. (2021).
FIGURE 2Number of anatomical entities per developmental stage of Branchiostoma lanceolatum. The number of anatomical entities (Y-axis) in the unfertilized egg as well as at each developmental stage from the 1-cell stage to the adult stage (X-axis) is indicated.
FIGURE 3Example for the representation of a structure-based subclass hierarchy in the amphioxus ontology (AMPHX). Using the amphioxus endostyle as an example, the partonomy relationships between different terms (“part_of”, “develops_from”, and “is a”) as well as the developmental stages during which the structure is present (“starts during” and “ends during”) are shown. The figure has been adapted from the Graph view utility proposed at OLS (Côté et al., 2008).
Amphioxus developmental periods and stages from the zygote to the adult.
| Period | Stage | ID | Description |
| Zygote period | AMPHX:0000008 | ||
| 1-cell stage | AMPHX:0000022 | Fertilized egg before first cell division | |
| Cleavage period | AMPHX:0000009 | ||
| 2-cell stage | AMPHX:0000023 | ||
| 4-cell stage | AMPHX:0000024 | ||
| 8-cell stage | AMPHX:0000025 | ||
| 16-cell stage | AMPHX:0000026 | ||
| 32-cell stage | AMPHX:0000027 | ||
| 64-cell stage | AMPHX:0000028 | ||
| 128-cell stage | AMPHX:0000029 | ||
| Blastula period | AMPHX:0000010 | ||
| Blastula stage | AMPHX:0000031 | Initiation of asynchronous cell division | |
| Gastrula period | AMPHX:0000011 | ||
| Gastrula-G0 stage | AMPHX:0000032 | Initial flattening of the vegetal zone | |
| Gastrula-G1 stage | AMPHX:0000033 | Flattened vegetal pole | |
| Gastrula-G2 stage | AMPHX:0000034 | Invaginated vegetal pole, mesendoderm does not touch ectoderm | |
| Gastrula-G3 stage | AMPHX:0000035 | Cap shaped, mesendoderm touches ectoderm | |
| Gastrula-G4 stage | AMPHX:0000036 | Cup shaped | |
| Gastrula-G5 stage | AMPHX:0000037 | Vase shaped, due to body elongation during blastopore closure | |
| Gastrula-G6 stage | AMPHX:0000038 | Bottle shaped, flattening neuroectoderm | |
| Neurula period | AMPHX:0000012 | ||
| Neurula-N0 stage | AMPHX:0000040 | Neural plate, just before blastopore closure | |
| Neurula-N1 stage | AMPHX:0000041 | 1–3 somite pairs | |
| Neurula-N2 stage | AMPHX:0000042 | 4–5 somite pairs, hatching | |
| Neurula-N3 stage | AMPHX:0000043 | 6–7 somite pairs | |
| Neurula-N4 stage | AMPHX:0000044 | 8–9 somite pairs, prior to schizocoelic somite formation | |
| Neurula-N5 stage | AMPHX:0000058 | 10–11 somite pairs | |
| Tailbud period | AMPHX:0000013 | ||
| Tailbud-T0 stage | AMPHX:0000045 | 12 somite pairs, tailbud shape, and enlarged pharyngeal region | |
| Tailbud-T1 stage | AMPHX:0000046 | 13 somite pairs, mouth and pre-oral pit anlagen, and first pigment spot | |
| Larva period | AMPHX:0000015 | ||
| Larva-L0 stage | AMPHX:0000047 | Open mouth, no open gill slits | |
| Larva-L1 stage | AMPHX:0000048 | Open mouth, 1 open gill slit | |
| Larva-L2 stage | AMPHX:0000049 | Open mouth, 2 open gill slits | |
| Larva-L3 stage | AMPHX:0000050 | Open mouth, 3 open gill slits | |
| Larva-L4 stage | AMPHX:0000051 | Open mouth, 4–13 gill slits | |
| Larva-PL stage | AMPHX:0000052 | Open mouth, 14–15 gill slits | |
| Metamorphosis | AMPHX:0000016 | ||
| Larva-EML stage | AMPHX:0000053 | Metapleural folds start to grow | |
| Larva-MML stage | AMPHX:0000054 | Gill slit row starts to duplicate, hepatic cecum starts to develop | |
| Larva-LML stage | AMPHX:0000055 | Mouth migration to frontal position | |
| Juvenile period | AMPHX:0000018 | ||
| Juvenile-J stage | AMPHX:0000056 | Adult-like morphology, length of less than 3 cm | |
| Adult period | AMPHX:0000020 | ||
| Adult-A stage | AMPHX:0000057 | Adult-like morphology, length of more than 3 cm |
FIGURE 4Example for the hierarchical relationships in the AMPHX ontology. Using the amphioxus endostyle as an example, the anatomical entities giving rise to the structure (“develops from”) are indicated, starting with the macromere in the 8-cell stage embryo. The figure has been adapted from the Graph view utility proposed at OLS (Côté et al., 2008).