Changing of the cell division axes drives vulva evolution in nematodes |
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Authors: | Kolotuev Irina Podbilewicz Benjamin |
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Institution: | Department of Biology, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, Israel |
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Abstract: | Vulval epithelial tubes invaginate through concerted cell migration, ring formation, stacking of rings and intra-ring cell fusion in the nematodes Caenorhabditis elegans, Oscheius tipulae and Pristionchus pacificus. The number of rings forming the invaginations is invariantly seven, six, and eight, respectively. We hypothesize that each ring is formed from pairs of symmetrically positioned primordial vulval cells following three premises: If the final cell division is left-right, the daughters will fuse, migrate and form only one ring. If these cells do not divide, one ring will form. If the final division is anterior-posterior, two rings will form. We test the ring hypothesis and found coincidence between the patterns of vulva cell divisions and the number of rings for 12 species. We find heterochronic variations in the timing of division, migration and fusion of the vulval cells between species. We report a unique ring-independent pathway of vulva formation in Panagrellus redivivus. C. elegans lin-11(n389) mutation results in cell fate transformations including changes in the orientation of vulval cell division. lin-11 animals have an additional ring, as predicted by the ring hypothesis. We propose that the genetic pathway determining how vulval cells invaginate evolves through ring-dependent and ring-independent mechanisms. |
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Keywords: | Vulva development Nematode evolution lin-11 Cell division axis Cell migration Cell fusion Caenorhabditis elegans Pristionchus pacificus Oscheius tipulae Panagrellus redivivus |
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