Literature DB >> 8575325

Cell-autonomous shift from axial to paraxial mesodermal development in zebrafish floating head mutants.

M E Halpern1, C Thisse, R K Ho, B Thisse, B Riggleman, B Trevarrow, E S Weinberg, J H Postlethwait, C B Kimmel.   

Abstract

Zebrafish floating head mutant embryos lack notochord and develop somitic muscle in its place. This may result from incorrect specification of the notochord domain at gastrulation, or from respecification of notochord progenitors to form muscle. In genetic mosaics, floating head acts cell autonomously. Transplanted wild-type cells differentiate into notochord in mutant hosts; however, cells from floating head mutant donors produce muscle rather than notochord in wild-type hosts. Consistent with respecification, markers of axial mesoderm are initially expressed in floating head mutant gastrulas, but expression does not persist. Axial cells also inappropriately express markers of paraxial mesoderm. Thus, single cells in the mutant midline transiently co-express genes that are normally specific to either axial or paraxial mesoderm. Since floating head mutants produce some floor plate in the ventral neural tube, midline mesoderm may also retain early signaling capabilities. Our results suggest that wild-type floating head provides an essential step in maintaining, rather than initiating, development of notochord-forming axial mesoderm.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8575325     DOI: 10.1242/dev.121.12.4257

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Development        ISSN: 0950-1991            Impact factor:   6.868


  29 in total

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