Fig. 7. A model for patterning of the vegetal hemisphere in ascidian
embryos. (A) Patterning in normal embryos. Cell types are
highlighted by the same color code as in
Fig. 1. At the division to the
64-cell stage, two kinds of asymmetric division take place in the anterior (NC
vs. Not) and posterior (Mes vs. Mus) marginal zones. macho-1 is a maternal and
intrinsic competence factor for mesenchyme induction. Light blue arrows
indicate FGF signal. (B) Direction of asymmetry for segregation of
muscle and mesenchyme fates is determined by the direction from which the FGF
signal comes. (C) Polarity of asymmetric division that produces nerve
cord and notochord precursors is determined by the direction from which the
inhibitory signal to suppress notochord fate comes. The signal inhibits
activation of MAPK by the FGF signal and expression of FoxA on the
nerve cord side. Presence of the ectodermal signal seems to be more crucial
for generation of the medial nerve cord precursors (A7.4 cells in
Fig. 1) than that of the
lateral precursors (A7.8 cells). See text for details. Ecto, ectoderm; En,
endoderm; Mes, mesenchyme; Mus, muscle; NC, nerve cord; Not, notochord.