4.6 Article

Transcriptional Analysis of the Endostyle Reveals Pharyngeal Organ Functions in Ascidian

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology12020245

Keywords

endostyle; RNA sequencing; Styela clava; ascidian; organ-specific gene; cross-species comparison

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The formation of complex organs in evolution has always been a fascinating topic. The prototype of complex organs likely existed in ancient evolutionary lineages. In certain sister groups to vertebrates, like cephalochordates and urochordates, a specialized pharyngeal organ called the endostyle is uniquely found. This organ is involved in filter-feeding and thyroid hormone synthesis, and can be considered a prototype of the thyroid gland. The comprehensive analysis of the endostyle in the ascidian Styela clava revealed its function as a thyroid and parathyroid gland, as well as its correlation with other organs like the head kidney and bone marrow in advanced vertebrates.
Simple Summary Formation of the complex organ has long been an arresting topic in evolution. The prototype of the complex organ is more likely to exist in creatures of ancient evolutionary hierarchy. In sister groups to vertebrates, including cephalochordate and urochordate, and the basal vertebrate, cyclostomate, a specialized pharyngeal organ is uniquely possessed by animals in these groups, named the endostyle. The endostyle serves as a filter-feeding and thyroid hormone-synthesizing function and is recognized as a prototype of the thyroid gland. Here, we comprehensively uncovered the expression profile of the endostyle in Styela clava, a wildly distributed ascidian with strong vitality. Cross-species comparison assures the function of the endostyle as a thyroid and parathyroid gland and the key composition of the digestive tract. Meanwhile, the high correlation with blood-producing organs, such as the head kidney and bone marrow in advanced vertebrates, implies a potential function of the endostyle. The endostyle is a pharyngeal organ with an opening groove and cilia in invertebrate chordates (amphioxus and ascidian) and cyclostomate (lamprey), serving as a filter-feeding tract and thyroid-secreting location. Emerging evidence implies its complex cellular composition and potentially versatile functions. Multiple cell types in the endostyle have been thought to be progenitors of complex organs in advanced vertebrates. To describe the expression profile and the potential functions, bulk RNA sequencing on the endostyle in ascidian Styela clava was conducted and distinct markers were selected by multileveled comparative analysis. Transcriptional data assay and qRT-PCR-verified results showed the regional expression patterns of Hox genes in the longitudinal axis. Organ-specific markers of the endostyle was proposed by comparing expression with the main organs of the ascidian. A cross-species transcriptional profile projection between the endostyle and organs from Danio rerio and Homo sapiens indicates a robust homogenous relationship to the thyroid and digestive system of the endostyle. The high similarity between the endostyle and the head kidney in zebrafish/the bone marrow in human implies uniquely profound functions of the pharyngeal organ in proto-vertebrates. Our result revealed that the transcriptional profile of the human parathyroid gland was similar to the ascidian endostyle, indicating the evolutionary origin of vertebrate hormone secretion organs.

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