4.8 Article

Dpp/BMP2-4 Mediates Signaling from the D-Quadrant Organizer in a Spiralian Embryo

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 15, Pages 2003-2010

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.05.059

Keywords

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Funding

  1. N.S.F [IOS-1146782]
  2. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences [1146782] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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In some animal groups, the secondary embryonic axis is patterned by a small group of cells, often called an organizer, that signals to other cells to establish the correct pattern of cell fates. The Dpp/BMP2-4 pathway plays a central role in secondary axis patterning in many animals [1-11], but it has not been examined during early axial patterning in spiralian embryogenesis. This is a deeply conserved mode of development found in mollusks, annelids, nemerteans, entoprocts, and some marine platyhelminth groups (reviewed in [12, 13]). In the spiralian embryo of the mollusk Ilyanassa, we find that the Dpp ortholog (loDpp) is expressed most strongly on the dorsal side, in cells of the embryonic organizer and its neighbors. Phospho-smad staining indicates that the pathway is active in all lineages during organizer signaling, but activation is strongest on the dorsal side. Knockdown of loDpp by morpholino oligos prevents the development of all structures that require organizer signaling and ventralizes the embryo. Ectopic activation of the pathway can induce eyes and external shell, which require organizer signaling. These results indicate that Dpp/BMP2-4 signaling is a key part of the spiralian organizer and suggest similarity with other metazoan organizers. However, the fact that loDpp/BMP2-4 is inducing, rather than repressing, the neuroectoderm is a surprising difference that may be conserved among spiralians. These results connect the spiralian organizer to this general aspect of secondary axis patterning but highlight the significant variation across animals in effects of the pathway on particular cell types and tissues.

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