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Development 128, 3521-3531 (2001)
© 2001 The Company of Biologists Limited

Identification and expression of the lamprey Pax6 gene: evolutionary origin of the segmented brain of vertebrates

Yasunori Murakami1,2,*,{ddagger}, Michio Ogasawara3,*, Fumiaki Sugahara1, Shigeki Hirano4, Nori Satoh3 and Shigeru Kuratani1,2

1 Department of Biology, Okayama University, Okayama 700-8530, Japan
2 Evolutionary Morphology Research Team, Center for Developmental Biology (CDB), RIKEN, Kobe, Japan
3 Department of Zoology, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan
4 Department of Medical Technology School of Health Sciences Faculty of Medicine, Niigata University, Niigata 951-8518, Japan
* These authors contributed equally to this work

{ddagger}Author for correspondence (e-mail: bothrops{at}cc.okayama-u.ac.jp)

Accepted June 22, 2001

The Pax6 gene plays a developmental role in various metazoans as the master regulatory gene for eye patterning. Pax6 is also spatially regulated in particular regions of the neural tube. Because the amphioxus has no neuromeres, an understanding of Pax6 expression in the agnathans is crucial for an insight into the origin of neuromerism in the vertebrates. We have isolated a single cognate cDNA of the Pax6 gene, LjPax6, from a Lampetra japonica cDNA library and observed the pattern of its expression using in situ hybridization. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that LjPax6 occurs as an sister group of gnathostome Pax6. In lamprey embryos, LjPax6 is expressed in the eye, the nasohypophysial plate, the oral ectoderm and the brain. In the central nervous system, LjPax6 is expressed in clearly delineated domains in the hindbrain, midbrain and forebrain. We compared the pattern of LjPax6 expression with that of other brain-specific regulatory genes, including LjOtxA, LjPax2/5/8, LjDlx1/6, LjEmx and LjTTF1. Most of the gene expression domains showed conserved pattern, which reflects the situation in the gnathostomes, conforming partly to the neuromeric patterns proposed for the gnathostomes. We conclude that most of the segmented domains of the vertebrate brain were already established in the ancestor common to all vertebrates. Major evolutionary changes in the vertebrate brain may have involved local restriction of cell lineages, leading to the establishment of neuromeres.

Key words: Pax6, Lamprey, Embryo, Neuromeres, Forebrain




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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2001