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First published online July 11, 2006
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.02448
Institut de Biologie du Développement de Marseille, UMR 6216, CNRS/Université de la Méditerranée, Parc Scientifique de Luminy, Case 907, F-13288 Marseille Cedex 9, France.
* Authors for correspondence (e-mail: lamy{at}ibdm.univ-mrs.fr; lemaire{at}ibdm.univ-mrs.fr)
Accepted 18 May 2006
| SUMMARY |
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Key words: Ciona intestinalis, Anteroposterior patterning, Organizer, Ectoderm, Ascidian, Gene regulation, FoxA, Wnt signalling, sFRP
| INTRODUCTION |
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Vertebrates share the chordate body plan with two invertebrate chordate
groups, the cephalochordates and the tunicates
(Blair and Hedges, 2005
;
Delsuc et al., 2006
). Among the
tunicates, the ascidians have been proposed to be lacking an organizer
(Dehal et al., 2002
), a
property that may represent an ancestral chordate state
(Kourakis and Smith, 2005
).
The availability of two assembled Ciona genomes, of powerful
molecular tools and of extensive gene expression atlases make Ciona
intestinalis a seducing model to address how chordate anteroposterior
patterning can be achieved in absence of an organizer.
Ciona intestinalis forms a typical chordate tadpole larva made of
only around 2600 cells. The larval trunk/tail region contains the rostral
sticky palps, the anterior neural sensory vesicle (thought homologous to the
forebrain and midbrain of vertebrates), endoderm and mesenchymal tissue. The
larval tail is organized with a dorsal nerve cord (thought homologous to the
vertebrate spinal cord), a central notochord, ventral endodermal cells and
flanking muscles (for reviews, see
Nishida, 2005
;
Lemaire et al., 2002
).
Ascidian embryogenesis is well described and can be followed at the cellular level until the late gastrula stage. Cell cleavages are regular and the arising cell lineages are invariant. From the eight-cell stage, there is a segregation between vegetal blastomeres (A- and B-lines) that give rise to the endodermal and mesodermal tissues of the larva, and the animal blastomeres (a- and b-lines), which mainly develop into neural and epidermal tissues.
Ascidians were until recently considered as a classical model for mosaic
development, based on the inheritance of localized maternal factors in the
developing embryo. The identification of Macho-1 as a maternal
determinant of posterior vegetal fates
(Nishida and Sawada, 2001
;
Kobayashi et al., 2003
) gave
cues to understand axial patterning of this chordate embryo for the
mesendodermal fates. An anteroposterior difference also exists between the two
ectodermal lineages (a- and b-lines) from the eight-cell stage
(Rose, 1939
;
Reverberi and Minganti, 1947
;
Okado and Takahashi, 1990
;
Hudson and Lemaire, 2001
). The
anterior ectodermal a-line gives rise to the trunk epidermis and the sensory
vesicle. The posterior ectodermal b-line gives rise to the tail epidermis and
the dorsal row of the posterior nerve cord. Upon neural induction by
endogenous FGF signals emitted by anterior vegetal cells or by treatment with
recombinant FGFs, anterior a-line cells form pigment cells and express
anterior neural markers (such as Ci-Otx and Ci-gsx genes) at
tailbud stage. By contrast, posterior b-line cells rarely form pigment cells
or express anterior neural markers in response to FGF neural inducers
(Hudson and Lemaire,
2001
).
In this study, we made use of the extensive available molecular tools in
Ciona (Satoh and Levine,
2005
) to address the molecular mechanism of the establishment of
the anteroposterior difference in the animal hemisphere. We show that there is
a global difference between the anterior and posterior ectodermal lineages set
up autonomously from the eight-cell stage in the ascidian embryo. By analyzing
the mechanisms of activation of the earliest anterior ectodermal specific
gene, Ci-sFRP1/5, we show that Ci-FoxA-a, a member of the FoxA family
of transcription factors is a key zygotic activator of the anterior ectodermal
program and a repressor of posterior ectodermal fates.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Microinjection and electroporation
Microinjection was performed as described
(Bertrand et al., 2003
) in
unfertilized eggs. The sequence of the Ci-FoxA-a morpholino
(MO-CiFoxA-a) targeted against the ATG region was:
5'-TTGACGGTGGAGACGACAACATCAT-3' (Gene Tools, LLC). The sequence of
the control morpholino (MO-Control) was:
5'-CCTCTTACCTCAGTTACAATTTATA-3'. The morpholinos were injected at
a stock concentration of 0.7 mM.
DNA constructs (50 µg) were introduced by electroporation as in Bertrand
et al. (Bertrand et al., 2003
),
except when analysing the effect of MO injection on the
pSP1.72-sFRP-118::NLSLacZ and pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-mFoxA-a
constructs. In this case, morpholino (0.7 mM stock) and DNA constructs (20-30
ng/µl) were co-injected in unfertilized eggs. DNA electroporation or
microinjection leads to the mosaic inheritance and expression of the
electroporated plasmid in developing embryos, explaining that a proportion of
embryos does not express the construct. Expression of the transgenes was
always included within the endogenous expression of the corresponding
gene.
Cis-regulatory analysis
The Ci-sFRP1/5 regulatory region was analysed by phylogenetic
footprinting using Vista
(http://genome.lbl.gov/vista/)
(Dubchak et al., 2000
) and
ClustalW
(http://www.ch.embnet.org/)
(Thompson et al., 1994
)
alignments. The search for transcription factor binding sites was performed
using Transfac Professional 8.2
(http://www.generegulation.com/pub/databases.html)
(Matys et al., 2003
).
Ci-sFRP1/5 cis-regulatory fragments were PCR amplified from Ciona
intestinalis sperm genomic DNA using Accuprime Taq Polymerase
(Invitrogen) and inserted in pSP1.72-RfB::NLSLacZ or
pSP1.72-RfA-pBra::NLSLacZ Gateway (Invitrogen) destination vectors.
These vectors were generated by insertion of an RfB or RfA cassette in pSP1.72
(Corbo et al., 1997
) or in pBra
pSP1.72 (Bertrand et al., 2003
)
vectors in BamHI-NotI and HindIII sites,
respectively. A precise map of these vectors is available upon request.
The specific sequences of the different primers used for cloning Ci-sFRP1/5 cis-regulatory elements were: sFRP-proximal-for, 5'-TGTATGCCGTACATATGCCAG-3'; sFRP-proximal-rev, 5'-TTCGGGGCTCTGAAAAAACATAG-3'; sFRP-1067 distal-for, 5'-TTACGCTCGATGGCGCAACG-3'; sFRP-1067 distal-rev, 5'-AACTAAACCGCAACTATAGTATG-3'; sFRP-640-for, 5'-CGCTGTATATACAACTTTGC-3'; sFRP-640-rev, 5'-TGTCACTATCAAAGCATGTG-3'; sFRP-262-for, 5'-CGGGTTCTCATAGAATCTAC-3'; sFRP-262-rev, 5'-TTGCTATCAAATTAGTGTAGC-3'; sFRP-172-for, 5'-CGGGTTCTCATAGAATCTAC-3'; sFRP-172-rev, 5'-CAACACCAACAGATTACAATG-3'; sFRP-118-for, 5'-GCAAACAAACGACTTGTTTAC-3'; sFRP-118-rev, 5'-GCACGTTTGTTTAAATTGGAG-3'; sFRP-150-for, 5'-CGGGTTCTCATAGAATCTAC-3'; sFRP-150-rev, 5'-TCAATCCTCTGGCACCAAC-3'; sFRP-126-for, 5'-CGGGTTCTCATAGAATCTAC-3'; sFRP-126-rev, 5'-TAATCTGTTAACGGGACAAG-3'; sFRP-95-for, 5'-GCAAACAAACGACTTGTTTAC-3'; sFRP-95-rev, 5'-CAACACCAACAGATTACAATG-3'; sFRP-92-for, 5'-TGTCCCGTTAACAGATTAGG-3'; sFRP-92-rev, 5'-GCACGTTTGTTTAAATTGGAG-3'; sFRP-67-for, 5'-TGTCCCGTTAACAGATTAGG-3'; sFRP-67-rev, 5'-CAACACCAACAGATTACAATG-3'.
The 6-Fox construct was obtained by cloning: 5'-TCAGCAAACAAACGACTTGTTTACTTTTCAGCAAACAAACGACTTGTTTACTTTTCAGCAAACAAACGACTTGTTTACTTT-3' (Fox sites underlined) into the pSP1.72-RfA-pBra::NLSLacZ vector.
Ci-FoxA-a animal overexpression
The pSP1.72-pFOG::RfA destination vector for overexpression in animal cells
was generated first by PCR amplification on genomic DNA of Ci-FOG
cis-regulatory sequence that contains -1980 bp upstream of the ATG of
Ci-FOG (Friend of GATA, ci0100149797). The amplified fragment was
cloned into PstI/BamHI sites of a pSP1.72-based expression
vector in which the lacZ-coding region was replaced by the Gateway
RfA cassette.
The Ci-FoxA-a ORF was amplified from the cicl44j20 clone using T3/T7 primers containing the attB1/attB2 sequences: attB1-T3, 5'-GGGGACAAGTTTGTACAAAAAAGCAGGCTATTAACCCTCACTAAAGGGA-3'; T7-attB2, 5'-GGGGACCACTTTGTACAAGAAAGCTGGGTTAATACGACTCACTATAGGG-3'). The PCR product was recombined into the p221 donor vector (Invitrogen) and the resulting entry clone was recombined into pSP1.72-FOG::RfA destination vector, giving rise to pSP1.72-FOG::Ci-FoxA-a.
To rescue the Morpholino phenotype, the pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-mFoxA-a construct was generated as above except the ATG region recognized by the morpholino was altered by amplification of the ORF with attB1-mFoxA-a (5'-GGGGACAAGTTTGTACAAAAAAGCAGGCTAAAAATGATGCTTAGCAGCCCTCCATCAAAGTACCAACCCTTCC-3') and T7-attB2.
In situ hybridization and X-gal staining
In situ hybridization and X-gal staining were performed as described
(Bertrand et al., 2003
). DIG
probes were synthesized from the following cDNAs: Ci-sFRP1/5 (clone
12ZE09, GenBank AL666897), Ci-Otx
(Hudson et al., 2003
),
Ci-FoxA-a (GR1:cicl044j20), Ci-RORa (GR1:cilv008g20),
Ci-FoxC (GR1:cilv050a24), Ci-Delta2 (GR1:cieg005o22) and
Ci-Msxb (GR1:cign067l18).
Expression patterns were retrieved from the GHOST (http://hoya.zool.kyoto-u.ac.jp/otherfr.html) and Aniseed (http://aniseedibdm.univ-mrs.fr) databases. In situ hybridization results from this study were submitted to Aniseed.
| RESULTS |
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Wada and colleagues (Wada et al.,
1999
) showed that vegetal interactions are necessary at least
until the 32-cell stage for anteroposterior patterning of the epidermis. To
address whether Ci-sFRP1/5 expression is autonomous to the a-line or
induced by vegetal signals, we first inhibited the major vegetal inducer
Ci-FGF9/16/20 (reviewed in Nishida,
2005
) by treating the embryos with the U0126 MEK inhibitor from
the eight-cell stage. This treatment abolishes neural tissue formation
(Hudson et al., 2003
) but the
expression of Ci-sFRP1/5 remained as wild type in all a-line cells
(data not shown).
To further address the issue of the autonomous activation of Ci-sFRP1/5 in animal cells, we isolated animal blastomeres at the eightcell stage (when animal cells segregates from vegetal cells), cultured the explants until the 64-cell stage, and assayed Ci-sFRP1/5 expression in explants by in situ hybridization. When a whole animal cap was explanted, half of the cells of most explants expressed strongly Ci-sFRP1/5 at the 64-cell stage (80% of explants, n=75, Fig. 1B). The remaining explants (20%) expressed a weak, diffuse background-like staining. To assay whether this staining corresponded to anterior cells, we independently isolated anterior aline or posterior b-line cells at the eight-cell stage. At the equivalent of the 64-cell stage, all 16 cells of a-line explants strongly expressed Ci-sFRP1/5 gene (93% of explants, n=15, Fig. 1C) while no or very few cells of b-line explants expressed Ci-sFRP1/5 (6% of explants showing any staining, n=18) (Fig. 1D).
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Fox binding sites are necessary for anterior ectodermal expression of Ci-sFRP1/5
Ci-sFRP1/5 is expressed from the 64-cell stage, while the
difference between the anterior and posterior ectodermal lineages is set up as
early as the eight-cell stage. This suggests the existence of localized
upstream regulators of Ci-sFRP1/5 expression. To identify them, we
analysed the cis-regulatory sequences of Ci-sFRP1/5. Phylogenetic
footprinting between Ciona intestinalis and Ciona savignyi
genomes identified three conserved blocks in the 2 kb upstream of the putative
sFRP1/5 transcription start site
(Fig. 2A).
We cloned two fragments of this region upstream of a NLSLacZ reporter gene and revealed the expression of this reporter by X-gal staining at the 110-cell and neural plate stages. A proximal fragment (from the putative transcription start to -985 bp, Fig. 2A) containing two conserved blocks produced no specific staining (data not shown). By contrast, sFRP-1067, a distal 1 kb fragment (from -927 bp to -1993 bp, Fig. 2A), drove specific anterior animal expression from the 64-cell stage.
Deletion of 195 bp in the 3' extremity of this fragment abolished the
expression of the transgene. a-line-specific expression could, however, be
restored by adding a minimal promoter (from Ci-Bra gene)
(Bertrand et al., 2003
),
between the cloned fragment and the reporter gene, suggesting that the minimal
promoter of Ci-sFRP1/5 is located in this deleted region (data not
shown).
Next, we generated 5' and 3' deletion constructs by PCR (see Materials and methods) and assayed whether they drove MEK-independent expression throughout the a-line from the 64-cell stage as expected from the analysis of endogenous Ci-sFRP1/5 expression (Fig. 2B). The sFRP-67 construct had no activity (Fig. 2Bc). The sFRP-150, -126, -95 and -92 constructs drove a low frequency expression in only part of the a-line (Fig. 2Bb). Unlike Ci-sFRP1/5, this expression was MEK dependent (not shown). Finally, sFRP-640, -262, -172 and -118 drove pan-a-line (Fig. 2Ba), MEK-independent (Fig. 3A and not shown) expression that recapitulated endogenous Ci-sFRP1/5 expression.
To identify candidate factors acting in trans on sFRP1/5, we searched in
silico combinations of putative binding sites, conserved between C.
intestinalis and C. savignyi, and present in all enhancers
recapitulating Ci-sFRP1/5 expression but not in the other fragments.
We found a perfect correlation between the presence of at least three
Fox-binding sites and the ability of the fragment to drive pan-a-line
expression. To study the importance of these putative Fox-binding sites, we
focused on the smallest fragment driving expression throughout the a-line,
sFRP-118 (Fig. 2C). We point
mutated the core of the Fox binding sequences (TGTTT
TGCTT)
(Overdier et al., 1994
).
Mutation of the two 5' binding sites resulted in a great reduction of
the staining in a-line precursors (Fig.
3A). Most of the residual activity was MEK dependent and therefore
distinct from the endogenous Ci-sFRP1/5 regulation. Point mutations
in the 3' putative binding site abolished a-line staining. These
experiments (n>60 embryos, and at least two independent
experiments for each condition) suggest that putative Fox-binding sites are
necessary for the expression of the transgene from the 64-cell stage.
We next investigated if these putative Fox-binding sites were sufficient
for the expression in anterior animal cells from the 64-cell stage. We
trimerized the 5' region of the sFRP-118 element containing two putative
FOX binding sites to build a synthetic fragment of 81 bp containing six
identified Fox sites (6-Fox, Fig.
3B), which was placed in the pSP1.72-RfA-bpBra::NLSLacZ
vector. This construct drove strong MEK-independent expression throughout the
anterior animal a-cells from the 64-cell stage
(Fig. 3A and not shown).
Additional staining in the anterior vegetal A-line cells was also detected in
a large proportion of electroporated embryos. This expression was weaker than
a-line staining (Fig. 3A).
Consistent with the idea that this anterior expression is due to the presence
of the Fox-binding sites, similar results were observed in Halocynthia
roretzi by Oda-Ishii and colleagues
(Oda-Ishii et al., 2005
), and
repeated by us in Ciona intestinalis (not shown), with the Fox-BS
construct. This artificial construct is made of four Fox-binding sites from
the Hr-Otx cis-regulatory sequence and solely shares the Fox-binding
sites with 6-Fox (not shown). The anterior vegetal expression observed with
6-Fox is not due to a generally higher level of activity of this construct
compared with sFRP-118, as both elements drive similar levels of expression in
animal cells. Thus, the restriction of the expression of the sFRP-118 element
to the anterior animal region may involve additional trans-acting factors that
could either be animal-specific activators or vegetal repressors.
Ci-sFRP1/5 is a likely direct target of Ci-FoxA-a
Next, we looked for a Fox factor expressed at the right place and time to
be an activator of Ci-sFRP1/5. This Fox factor should be present in
the anterior half of the embryo before the 64-cell stage. There are 27
putative Fox genes in Ciona intestinalis genome
(Imai et al., 2004
). Four of
these are presumably not expressed in embryos, as they could not be detected
by RT-PCR (Imai et al., 2004
).
The remaining 23 genes were analysed by in situ hybridization and only two of
them detected in ectodermal cells before the 64-cell stage
(Imai et al., 2004
).
Ci-Orphan-Fox1 is ubiquitously expressed from the 16-cell stage,
while Ci-FoxA-a expression was reported at the 16-cell stage in
vegetal cells and in the a-line blastomeres.
|
To test the function of Ci-FoxA-a in Ciona embryos, we first performed loss-of-function experiments. When we injected an antisense morpholino oligonucleotide (MO) against Ci-FoxA-a in Ciona eggs prior to fertilization, the activity of the co-injected sFRP-118::NLSLacZ construct was significantly decreased. Owing to the mosaic inheritance of the plasmid, lacZ was detected in 58% of MO-control injected embryos (n=60, Fig. 4B). This proportion was lowered to 13% in embryos co-injected with MO-Ci-FoxA-a (n=71, Fig. 4C). The number of positive cells in these embryos was reduced (not shown). MO-Ci-FoxA-a-injected embryos also showed a strong decrease in endogenous Ci-sFRP1/5 expression, both at the 64-cell stage (MO-control, 87% positive embryos, n=47; MO-Ci-FoxA-a, 3% positive embryos, n=37). A similar effect was observed at the neural plate stage (Fig. 4B, n=30; Fig. 4C, n=33). Thus, Ci-FoxA-a is necessary for the activation of Ci-sFRP1/5 via the sFRP-118 enhancer.
We next sought to overexpress Ci-FoxA-a throughout the animal hemisphere. For this, we placed a full ORF cDNA under the control of the Ci-FOG gene regulatory sequences. The Ci-FOG gene is expressed in all animal cells from the 16-cell stage and is downregulated after the 64-cell stage (U.R. and P.L., unpublished).
We first used this approach to rescue the decrease of Ci-sFRP1/5 expression in MO-Ci-FoxA-a injected embryos. Co-injection of MO-Ci-FoxA-a and pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-mFoxA-a construct, which drives a mutated version of Ci-FoxA-a lacking the morpholino target site, restored expression of Ci-sFRP1/5 in ectodermal cells at the 64-cell stage, demonstrating the specificity of the effect of the morpholino (MO-Ci-FoxA-a, 20%, n=5; MO-Ci-FoxA-a + pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-mFoxA-a, 86%, n=14; data not shown).
To assay whether Ci-FoxA-a expression is sufficient to direct Ci-sFRP1/5 in the posterior b-line, we co-electroporated pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-FoxA-a with pSP1.72-sFRP-118-bpBra::NLSLacZ. X-gal staining was detected at the 110-cell stage in both the anterior and posterior animal blastomeres (54% of embryos showed b-line expression, n=48) (Fig. 4E). The same qualitative result was obtained when assaying endogenous Ci-sFRP1/5 expression at the 64-cell stage following pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-FoxA-a electroporation (Fig. 4E). Ectopic b-line expression was also seen at neural plate stage (Fig. 4E). We conclude that in a normal embryonic context, animal Ci-FoxA-a expression is sufficient for activating Ci-sFRP1/5 in all animal blastomeres. To rule out that this activation requires some relay via the vegetal cells, we electroporated in Ciona eggs pSP1.72-sFRP-118::NLSLacZ in the presence or absence of pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-FoxA-a, explanted the animal blastomeres at the eight-cell stage, and analysed reporter activity in the explant at the 110-cell stage. In the absence of ectopic FoxA-a, a-line explants expressed lacZ at the neural plate stage (43% of positive explants, n=14, Fig. 5C), but b-line explants did not (8%, n=13, Fig. 5E). In pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-FoxA-a-electroporated embryos, the expression of Ci-sFRP1/5 reporter staining was observed at neural plate stage in both a-line (73% of positive explants, n=11, Fig. 5D) and b-line (69%, n=13, Fig. 5F) explants. This experiment shows that Ci-FoxA-a is sufficient for the autonomous expression of anterior ectodermal genes.
|
Ci-FoxA-a is a global determinant of anterior ectoderm
We next tested the extent of the requirement of Ci-FoxA-a for
ectodermal patterning. For this, we tested first the effect, at the neural
plate stage, of interfering with the activity of this gene on several anterior
ectodermal markers. Ci-Otx is expressed in the precursors of the
sensory vesicle (a9.33, 34, 37, 38, 49, 50 cells)
(Hudson and Lemaire, 2001
),
Ci-FoxC is expressed in the precursors of the anterodorsal epidermis
and palps (a9.35, 36, 39, 40, 51, 52 cells)
(Imai et al., 2004
), and
Ci-Ror-a is expressed throughout the a-line
(Bertrand et al., 2003
)
(Fig. 5G,J,L).
When we downregulated Ci-FoxA-a activity by injection of MO-Ci-FoxA-a, expression was abolished for Ci-Otx (wt, 96%, n=47; MO-Ci-FoxA-a, 0%, n=29) (Fig. 5I) and Ci-Ror-a (wt, 90%, n=49; MO-Ci-FoxA-a, 0%, n=32) (Fig. 5N), suggesting that Ci-FoxA-a is generally required for the anterior ectodermal program.
This result is in keeping with two distinct scenarios for the establishment of the anterior identity in the Ciona ectoderm. The first one is an independent specification of the anterior and the posterior ectodermal territories, with Ci-FoxA-a promoting the anterior fate while other mechanisms specify the posterior ectoderm. The second one is the establishment of a posterior identity in the whole ectoderm in absence of anteriorizing signals, an identity repressed in the anterior region by the action of Ci-FoxA-a. To address this issue, we tested if Ci-FoxA-a participates to the inhibition of the posterior fate in the anterior ectoderm of the embryo.
When we overexpressed Ci-FoxA-a in all animal blastomeres by electroporating pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-FoxA-a, we observed ectopic staining for anterior markers in b-line cells. Ci-Otx was expressed in the sensory vesicle precursors as in wild-type embryos, but also in lateral cells of the neural plate corresponding to the posterior neural cells (b9.33, 37, 38 cells, Fig. 5H). Ci-FoxC was expressed in anterodorsal epidermis and palp precursors, as well as in lateral cells of the embryo, adjacent to the posterior neural cells (b9.35, 36, 40, Fig. 5K). Ci-Ror-a expression was likewise extended throughout bline cells (Fig. 5M). Thus, neural plate markers (Ci-Otx and Ci-FoxC) are ectopically expressed in the posterior neural lineage and the general anterior marker Ci-Ror-a is ectopically expressed more widely in the posterior ectoderm.
We then looked at posterior ectodermal markers. At the 110-cell stage, expression of Ci-Msxb and Ci-Delta2 is restricted to the b-line neural precursors. When we decreased Ci-FoxA-a activity by injection of MO-Ci-FoxA-a, we observed a strong ectopic activation of Ci-Delta2 at the 64-cell stage in the anterior neural blastomeres (a7.9 and a7.10 cells) (wt, 0% of embryos with ectopic expression, n=14; MO-Ci-FoxA-a, 89%, n=9, Fig. 6B). Conversely, when we overexpressed Ci-FoxA-a throughout the animal hemisphere, we observed a strong reduction of the expression at the 110-cell stage of Ci-Msxb (wt, 95%, n=41; pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-FoxA-a, 14%, n=60) (Fig. 6F) and Ci-Delta2 (wt, 96%, n=152; pSP1.72-pFOG::Ci-FoxA-a, 23%, n=116) (Fig. 6D), suggesting that Ci-FoxA-a represses the activation of these genes.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In this section, we discuss the emerging anterior cascade in ascidians and its evolutionary relevance.
Ci-FoxA-a is a conserved early zygotic determinant of anterior fate in the ascidian ectoderm
Ci-FoxA-a expression appears as the first step of differentiation
in the C. intestinalis ectoderm
(Fig. 7). Therefore, it
provides a molecular mechanism for the acquisition of different
anteroposterior competence to respond to neural induction revealed by previous
studies (Rose, 1939
;
Reverberi and Minganti, 1947
;
Okado and Takahashi, 1990
;
Hudson and Lemaire, 2001
).
However, the action of Ci-FoxA-a is not restricted to the definition
of the type of response to neural induction. Rather, it appears as a major
regulator of anterior ectodermal identity. Its absence leads to the
acquisition of posterior identity, while its ectopic expression in posterior
territories is sufficient to give them an anterior character. This role as a
major anterior ectodermal determinant is likely conserved in other ascidians
as Ci-FoxA-a orthologues are also expressed in the anterior, but not
the posterior, animal blastomeres in Ciona savignyi from the
eight-cell stage (Schimauchi et al., 2001) and in Halocynthia roretzi
(a distantly related species) at the 16-cell stage
(Shimauchi et al., 1997
).
|
A mechanism for the anterior activation of Ci-FoxA-a
Our findings suggest that, at the eight-cell stage, the animal territories
have a posterior default identity, which is counteracted by the activity of
Ci-FoxA in the a-line. This apparently contrasts with the current
model for AP regionalization in the vegetal territories in which posterior
determinants, found in the vegetal-posterior cortical region of the egg after
fertilization, are thought to define the anteroposterior axis of
endo-mesodermal fates by repressing a default anterior identity (for a review,
see Nishida, 2005
). As a
result, the patterning of endo-mesodermal tissues is currently explained
without the help of an anterior determinant. At first sight, this argues that
independent mechanisms pattern the AP axis in the ectoderm and endomesoderm.
Consistent with this proposal, Ci-FoxA-a expression is not sensitive
to the knock-down of the major vegetal posterior determinant identified to
date, Macho-1 (Yagi et al.,
2004
).
This apparent paradox may, however, principally stem from our lack of
understanding of the maternal factors, which activate Ci-FoxA-a at
the eight-cell stage. Two, non exclusive, scenarios are possible for
restricting Ci-FoxA-a anterior expression. A maternal activator may
be specifically active in the anterior region of the zygote. Such an activator
is unlikely to be encoded by a maternal messenger localized in anterior
territories as a large scale microarray analysis did not succeed in
identifying such localized maternal mRNA
(Yamada et al., 2005
).
Alternatively, the activation of Ci-FoxA-a could result from the
combination of a ubiquitous activator, and a repressor, distinct from
Ci-Macho1, present in the posterior region. In the latter case, the activation
of Ci-FoxA-a would be a `default' property of the embryo, repressed
in the posterior blastomeres, a situation similar to that observed in the
vegetal hemisphere. The identification of an enhancer recapitulating the
activation of Ci-FoxA-a in anterior territories during the cleavage
stages (Di Gregorio et al.,
2001
) (C.L., unpublished) opens the way to a better understanding
of this important issue.
An overall conservation of ectodermal patterning in chordates
The results presented here, combined to previous observations, give an
overall view of ectodermal patterning in ascidians, which appears to be a
multistep process. First, anterior and posterior identities are established
autonomously from the eight-cell stage as a result of Ci-FoxA-a
activation. Secondary signals emanating from the vegetal hemisphere then act
to refine this initial ectodermal patterning
(Wada et al., 1999
;
Darras and Nishida, 2001
;
Hudson et al., 2003
;
Hudson and Yasuo, 2005
). At
the 32-cell stage, Ci-FGF9/16/20 induces both anterior
(Bertrand et al., 2003
) and
posterior (Bertrand et al.,
2003
; Hudson and Yasuo,
2005
) neural tissue within the Ciona ectoderm.
Interestingly, while Ci-FoxA-a specifies the anterior or posterior identity of
ectodermal cells in response to this induction, it does not affect which
blastomeres are induced by FGF. Upon Ci-FoxA-a overexpression, a new
anterior neural plate thus forms in the presumptive posterior neural
territory, with sensory vesicle markers expressed closest to the
vegetal-inducing cells, palp marker expressed in a more lateral region and
anterior epidermis marker expressed in the posterior non-induced cells. This
result is in keeping with the proposal that the selection of the induced
animal cells relies mainly on the extent of the contact between inducing and
competent cells (Tassy et al.,
2006
). Subsequent, yet uncharacterized, vegetal signals are then
required to pattern the neural plate along the AP axis at the beginning of
gastrulation, discriminating the anterior palp identity from the more
posterior rostral CNS (Nishida and Satoh,
1989
).
|
It is currently unclear how deep the similarity between ascidians and
vertebrates extends. Only part of the ascidian neural tissue is induced
(reviewed by Lemaire et al.,
2002
), but a single inducer, FGF9/16/20, is at work,
differentially interpreted by anterior and posterior cells. This superficially
appears different from the `two steps' model as the anterior and posterior
identity of the induced tissue are specified at the time of induction, prior
to gastrulation. It should, however, be stressed that the precise timing of
action of the two vertebrate signals has not been determined. Furthermore, our
finding that Ci-sFRP1/5 and Ci-Ror-a, two antagonists of the
canonical Wnt pathway (Dennis at al.,
1999
; Forrester et al.,
2004
) are specifically expressed in anterior territories, under
control of Ci-FoxA-a and after the induction process, is in keeping
with a two-step model. However, Ci-sFRP1/5 morpholino knock-down experiments
have no apparent effect (C.L., unpublished), indicating that in a wild-type
situation this secreted antagonist of Wnt ligands may play a less crucial role
in the Ciona ectoderm than it does in zebrafish
(Houart et al., 2002
). A
rigorous assessment of the role of Wnt signalling and other extracellular
signals in ascidian ectodermal patterning, coupled to the deciphering of the
regulatory networks at work in both ascidians and vertebrates, will be
required to estimate the level of conservation of this event in chordates.
However, at this stage, we can already point to the overall conservation of a
logic combining an early autonomous subdivision of the ectoderm, which affects
its competence to respond to a subsequent cascade of vegetal signals.
Conservation and divergences in the function of chordate FoxA genes in anterior specification
We found that Ci-FoxA-a is a crucial determinant of the ascidian
anterior identity. This appears to be a shared property of ascidians and
vertebrates. In vertebrates, FoxA orthologues are also expressed
before gastrulation (Ruiz i Altaba and
Jessell, 1992
; Sasaki and
Hogan, 1993
; Perea-Gomez et
al., 1999
; Strahle et al.,
1993
) and important for the formation of anterior ectodermal
territories (Suri et al.,
2004
; Perea-Gomez et al.,
1999
). Furthermore, ascidian and vertebrate embryos share
conserved molecular events downstream of FoxA genes. In ascidians,
Ci-FoxA-a is necessary for the activation of the Ci-Otx
gene, that has conserved functions among bilaterians to specify the anterior
ectoderm (Hirth and Reichert,
1999
). Likewise, in mouse and Xenopus embryos,
FoxA2/HNF3-ß are involved in the regulation of Otx2
(Perea-Gomez et al.,
2001
; Suri et al.,
2004
). Thus, among chordates, Otx is a conserved downstream target
of FoxA necessary for the formation of anterior ectoderm.
Likewise, Ci-FoxA-a could play a role in the protection of the
ascidian anterior ectoderm from posteriorizing signals known to caudalize the
neurectoderm (Hudson et al.,
2003
), as proposed in mouse
(Perea-Gomez et al., 1999
) and
in Xenopus in the `two-step' model. This protection could occur
through the activation of Ci-sFRP1/5 and Ci-Ror-a, two antagonists of the
canonical Wnt pathway (Dennis et al.,
1999
; Forrester et al.,
2004
).
These observations suggest that Ci-FoxA-a and vertebrates FoxA2 may trigger similar molecular pathways to pattern the ectoderm along the anteroposterior axis, although the relative individual importance of these pathways may vary. It will be interesting to identify and compare additional targets of FoxA genes in ascidians and vertebrates.
|
A possible scenario for the acquisition of different roles by FoxA while
retaining a general function in anteroposterior patterning, may be an
ancestral expression and function in both animal and vegetal anterior
territories, followed in the vertebrate lineage by a gradual amplification of
its role in the vegetal territories at the expense of its animal role.
Dorsoanterior vegetal territories in amniotes correspond to the organizer, a
structure that has been proposed to constitute a vertebrate innovation whose
function is to maintain during gastrulation an initial coarse pattern
(Kourakis and Smith, 2005
). In
support to this model, an organizer-independent activation of Hox genes
(markers of posterior tissues) is seen in Xenopus in the mesoderm
from the beginning of gastrulation (Wacker
et al., 2004
). Wacker and colleagues proposed that, during
gastrulation movements, the organizer activity stabilizes and synchronizes the
anteroposterior boundaries of Hox expression between adjacent ectoderm and
mesoderm. We can speculate that, in vertebrates, the coordination of two
different tissues streaming past one another requires constant mesodermal
signals to adjust and maintain the boundaries of an already patterned
ectoderm. By contrast, in ascidians the restricted gastrulation movements,
which do not involve change in cell neighbourhood relationships
(Munro et al., 2006
), may not
require this control mechanism. The acquisition of organizing activity by the
vertebrate dorsoanterior mesendoderm may be linked to a shift of the major
function of FoxA in ectodermal patterning from the animal to the vegetal
territories. Alternatively, FoxA may have been specifically recruited
in the tunicate ectoderm to form autonomously anterior structures.
Note added in proof
The importance of Ci-Foxa in anterior specification has been independently
reported (Imai et al.,
2006
).
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