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1.
Developmental gradients play a central role in axial patterning in hydra. As part of the effort towards elucidating the molecular basis of these gradients as well as investigating the evolution of the mechanisms underlying axial patterning, genes encoding signaling molecules are under investigation. We report the isolation and characterization of HyBMP5-8b, a BMP5-8 orthologue, from hydra. Processes governing axial patterning are continuously active in adult hydra. Expression patterns of HyBMP5-8b in normal animals and during bud formation, hydra's asexual form of reproduction, were examined. These patterns, coupled with changes in patterns of expression in manipulated tissues during head regeneration, foot regeneration as well as under conditions that alter the positional value gradient indicate that the gene is active in two different processes. The gene plays a role in tentacle formation and in patterning the lower end of the body axis.  相似文献   

2.
Developmental gradients are known to play important roles in axial patterning in hydra. Current efforts are directed toward elucidating the molecular basis of these gradients. We report the isolation and characterization of HyAlx, an aristaless-related gene in hydra. The expression patterns of the gene in adult hydra, as well as during bud formation, head regeneration and the formation of ectopic head structures along the body column, indicate the gene plays a role in the specification of tissue for tentacle formation. The use of RNAi provides more direct evidence for this conclusion. The different patterns of HyAlx expression during head regeneration and bud formation also provide support for a recent version of a reaction-diffusion model for axial patterning in hydra.  相似文献   

3.
Local self-activation and long ranging inhibition provide a mechanism for setting up organising regions as signalling centres for the development of structures in the surrounding tissue. The adult hydra hypostome functions as head organiser. After hydra head removal it is newly formed and complete heads can be regenerated. The molecular components of this organising region involve Wnt-signalling and β-catenin. However, it is not known how correct patterning of hypostome and tentacles are achieved in the hydra head and whether other signals in addition to HyWnt3 are needed for re-establishing the new organiser after head removal. Here we show that Notch-signalling is required for re-establishing the organiser during regeneration and that this is due to its role in restricting tentacle activation. Blocking Notch-signalling leads to the formation of irregular head structures characterised by excess tentacle tissue and aberrant expression of genes that mark the tentacle boundaries. This indicates a role for Notch-signalling in defining the tentacle pattern in the hydra head. Moreover, lateral inhibition by HvNotch and its target HyHes are required for head regeneration and without this the formation of the β-catenin/Wnt dependent head organiser is impaired. Work on prebilaterian model organisms has shown that the Wnt-pathway is important for setting up signalling centres for axial patterning in early multicellular animals. Our data suggest that the integration of Wnt-signalling with Notch-Delta activity was also involved in the evolution of defined body plans in animals.  相似文献   

4.
We have isolated Cngsc, a hydra homologue of goosecoid gene. The homeodomain of Cngsc is identical to the vertebrate (65-72%) and Drosophila (70%) orthologues. When injected into the ventral side of an early Xenopus embryo, Cngsc induces a partial secondary axis. During head formation, Cngsc expression appears prior to, and directly above, the zone where the tentacles will emerge, but is not observed nearby when the single apical tentacle is formed. This observation indicates that the expression of the gene is not necessary for the formation of a tentacle per se. Rather, it may be involved in defining the border between the hypostome and the tentacle zone. When Cngsc(+) tip of an early bud is grafted into the body column, it induces a secondary axis, while the adjacent Cngsc(-) region has much weaker inductive capacities. Thus, Cngsc is expressed in a tissue that acts as an organizer. Cngsc is also expressed in the sensory neurons of the tip of the hypostome and in the epithelial endodermal cells of the upper part of the body column. The plausible roles of Cngsc in organizer function, head formation and anterior neuron differentiation are similar to roles goosecoid plays in vertebrates and Drosophila. It suggests widespread evolutionary conservation of the function of the gene.  相似文献   

5.
Axial patterning of the aboral end of the hydra body column was examined using expression data from two genes. One, shin guard, is a novel receptor protein-tyrosine kinase gene expressed in the ectoderm of the peduncle, the end of the body column adjacent to the basal disk. The other gene, manacle, is a paired-like homeobox gene expressed in differentiating basal disk ectoderm. During regeneration of the aboral end, expression of manacle precedes that of shin guard. This result is consistent with a requirement for induction of peduncle tissue by basal disk tissue. Our data contrast with data on regeneration of the oral end. During oral end regeneration, markers for tissue of the tentacles, which lie below the extreme oral end (the hypostome), are detected first. Later, markers for the hypostome itself appear at the regenerating tip, with tentacle markers displaced to the region below. Additional evidence that tissue can form basal disk without passing through a stage as peduncle tissue comes from LiCl-induced formation of patches of ectopic basal disk tissue. While manacle is ectopically expressed during formation of basal disk patches, shin guard is not. The genes examined also provide new information on development of the aboral end in buds. Although adult hydra are radially symmetrical, expression of both genes in the bud's aboral end is initially asymmetrical, appearing first on the side of the bud closest to the parent's basal disk. The asymmetry can be explained by differences in positional information in the body column tissue that evaginates to form a bud. As predicted by this hypothesis, grafts reversing the orientation of evaginating body column tissue also reverse the orientation of asymmetrical gene expression.  相似文献   

6.
目的:如何建立和维持体轴是一个基本的发育生物学问题,而淡水水螅是适合进行形态发生和个体发育调控机制研究的重要模式生物。本文观察了大乳头水螅异常极性体轴的形成及矫正进程,初步探讨水螅极性体轴的维持和调控机制。方法:先切取水螅的整个头部,再获得带二根触手的口区组织。通过ABTS细胞化学染色法检测水螅基盘分子标志物过氧化物酶的表达,判别水螅基盘组织(水螅足区的末端)是否形成。结果:从40块口区组织再生得到的水螅个体中有1例极性体轴发育异常的个体,其身体两端均发育成头区,且两端的头区均具有捕食能力。随后水螅其中一端头区的触手逐渐萎缩、退化,最终该端头区转化成具有吸附能力的基盘组织。结论:水螅组织的再生涉及极性体轴的重建,而一些特殊因素可能造成临时性的水螅极性体轴调控紊乱。本研究表明水螅具备自我矫正异常极性体轴的能力。另外,本研究结果显示水螅触手可以萎缩直至退化,该现象涉及的细胞学过程可能是非常复杂的,有可能涉及到触手细胞的凋亡转化过程,也可能是触手的高度分化细胞仍然具备去分化能力、去分化后再转移到身体其他地方,其具体机制值得进一步探究。  相似文献   

7.
Lithium chloride treatment of hydras cut just proximal to the tentacle circle and just distal to the budding region induces a supernumerary head at the proximal cut surface. Such a supernumerary head does not appear in the normal course of regeneration. The bipolar hydra thus formed persists for several weeks and later separates to form two normal individuals. The supernumerary head is not formed at the proximal cut surface when the hydra is transected just distal to the budding zone and the distal portion is allowed to regenerate in the Li-containing medium. LiCl has a slight inhibitory effect on the regeneration of hypostomes or tentacles when the animal is cut at the base of the hypostome.  相似文献   

8.
Morphogen gradients play an important role in pattern formation during early stages of embryonic development in many bilaterians. In an adult hydra, axial patterning processes are constantly active because of the tissue dynamics in the adult. These processes include an organizer region in the head, which continuously produces and transmits two signals that are distributed in gradients down the body column. One signal sets up and maintains the head activation gradient, which is a morphogenetic gradient. This gradient confers the capacity of head formation on tissue of the body column, which takes place during bud formation, hydra''s mode of asexual reproduction, as well as during head regeneration following bisection of the animal anywhere along the body column. The other signal sets up the head inhibition gradient, which prevents head formation, thereby restricting bud formation to the lower part of the body column in an adult hydra. Little is known about the molecular basis of the two gradients. In contrast, the canonical Wnt pathway plays a central role in setting up and maintaining the head organizer.Morphogen gradients play a critical role in the early stages of embryogenesis in a number of metazoans in that they initiate and are involved in axial patterning processes. Such a gradient also plays a role in axial patterning in hydra, a primitive metazoan. However, unlike in most metazoans, this gradient is continuously active in an adult hydra as part of the tissue dynamics of the adult animal.The structure of a hydra is fairly simple (Fig. (Fig.1).1). It consists of a single axis with radial symmetry, which contains a head, body column, and foot along the axis. The head consist of two parts: the hypostome in the apex, and the tentacle zone from which the tentacles emerge in the basal part of the head. The body column has three parts: the gastric region and peduncle in the apical, and basal parts with a budding zone between the gastric region and peduncle. Buds, hydra''s mode of asexual reproduction, emerge from the budding zone between the gastric region and peduncle.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Longitudinal cross section of an adult hydra. The multiple regions are labeled. The two protrusions from the body column are early and late stages of bud development. The arrows indicate the direction of tissue displacement. (Reprinted from Bode 2001.)Three cell lineages are involved. The axis consists of a cylindrical shell that is made up of two concentric epithelial layers, the ectoderm and endoderm, which are separated by a basement membrane. Interspersed among the epithelial cells of both layers are the cells of the third lineage, the interstitial cell lineage. It consists of interstitial cells, which are multipotent stem cells (David and Murphy 1977), located primarily in the ectoderm throughout the body column. They give rise to neurons, secretory cells, and nematocytes, which are the stinging cells that are typical of cnidarians, as well as gametes when a hydra undergoes sexual reproduction (David and Murphy 1977).In an adult hydra, the epithelial cells of both layers are constantly in the mitotic cycle (David and Campbell 1972; Campbell and David 1974). The expanding tissue in the upper part of the body column is continuously displaced apically into the head (Fig. 1). Once there, it is displaced onto and along the tentacles or into the hypostome, and eventually sloughed when reaching the extremities (Campbell 1967; Otto and Campbell 1977). Tissue in the remainder of the body column is displaced basally either onto developing buds, or further down onto the foot, where it is sloughed at the bottom of the foot. Thus, the tissues of an adult hydra are continuously in a steady state of production and loss. As a hydra has no defined lifetime (Martinez 1998), this activity goes on indefinitely.  相似文献   

9.
Differentiation of body column epithelial cells into tentacle epithelial cells in Hydra is accompanied by changes in both cell shape and cell-cell contact. The molecular mechanism by which epithelial cells acquire tentacle cell characteristics is unknown. Here we report that expression of a Hydra homologue of the mammalian IQGAP1 protein is strongly upregulated during tentacle formation. Like mammalian IQGAP, Hydra IQGAP1 contains an N-terminal calponin-homology domain, IQ repeats and a conserved C terminus. In adult polyps a high level of Hydra IQGAP1 mRNA is detected at the basis of tentacles. Consistent with a role in tentacle formation, IQGAP1 expression is activated during head regeneration and budding at a time when tentacles are emerging. The observations support the previous hypothesis that IQGAP proteins are involved in cytoskeletal as well as cell-cell contact rearrangements. Received: 25 January 2000 / Accepted: 2 May 2000  相似文献   

10.
11.
Peptides, as signaling molecules, play a number of roles in cell activities. An epitheliopeptide, Hym-301, has been described as a peptide involved in morphogenesis in hydra. However, little is known about the intracellular location of the peptide or its specific functions. To investigate the mechanism of morphogenesis that involves peptidic molecules, we have examined the intracellular localization of Hym-301 in hydra by using immunohistochemical and immunogold electron-microscopic analyses. We have found that the pattern of distribution of mature peptide is slightly different from that of its mRNA, and that the peptide is stored in vesicles located adjacent to the cell membrane. We have also found that the peptide is released both extracellularly and internally to the cytoplasm of the cells. Based upon these observations, we have constructed a possible model mechanism of homeostatic regulation of the distribution of the Hym-301 peptide in a dynamic tissue context.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The characterization of head activator (HA) as a morphogen capable of increasing the number of tentacles regenerated by hydra was re-examined. Gastric tissue was excised from HA-treated whole animals and allowed to regenerate. At the cellular level the differentiation of head-specific ectodermal epithelial cells was monitored by quantifying monoclonal antibody, CP8, labeling. This labeling has been correlated with a rise in head activation potential and the determination of tissue to form head structures (Javois et al. 1986). At the morphological level tentacle number was monitored. HA-treated regenerates began the head patterning processes and evaginated tentacles sooner than controls but did not produce extra tentacles. The kinetics of CP8 labeling did not reveal major differences between treated and control regenerates after the initiation of head-specific epithelial cell differentiation. HA appeared to act more like a growth factor stimulating the differentiation of head-specific cell types rather than a morphogen which altered head morphology. An additional aspect of the study examined axial-specific effects of HA on the initiation and extent of head-specific epithelial cell differentiation. The cellular response of ectodermal epithelial cells to HA was dependent on their original axial location. More CP8+ tissue differentiated in regenerates of apical as opposed to mid-gastric origin.  相似文献   

13.
A monoclonal antibody, CP8, has been isolated which displays a position-specific binding pattern to epithelial cells of Hydra oligactis. Antibody binding is restricted to the head of adult animals. When a new head develops during the budding process, CP8 binding is present in the area which will form the head well before morphological signs of it. Similarly, following decapitation as a new head regenerates, CP8 label appears covering a domed area at the apical end of the regenerate before tentacles evaginate delineating the head. When bud development or regeneration is complete, CP8 label is restricted to the new head. Experiments indicate the appearance of CP8 label during the formation of a head correlates closely with the patterning events which result in the determination of the tissue to form a head. The usefulness of CP8 as a diagnostic tool for exploring the dynamics of head pattern formation in hydra is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The head of a hydra is composed of two parts, a domed hypostome with a mouth at the top and a ring of tentacles below. When animals are decapitated a new head regenerates. During the process of regeneration the apical tip passes through a transient stage in which it exhibits tentacle-like characteristics before becoming a hypostome. This was determined from markers which appeared before morphogenesis took place. The first was a monoclonal antibody, TS-19, that specifically binds to the ectodermal epithelial cells of the tentacles. The second was an antiserum against the peptide Arg-Phe-amide (RFamide), which in the head of hydra is specific to the sensory cells of the hypostomal apex and the ganglion cells of the lower hypostome and tentacles. The TS-19 expression and the ganglion cells with RFamide-like immunoreactivity (RLI) arose first at the apex and spread radially. Once the tentacles began evaginating in a ring, both the TS-19 antigen and RLI+ ganglion cells gradually disappeared from the presumptive hypostome area and RLI+ sensory cells appeared at the apex. By tracking tissue movements during morphogenesis it became clear that the apical cap, in which these changes took place, did not undergo tissue turnover. The implications of this tentacle-like stage for patterning the two-part head are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The relative sizes of the various structures in Hydra attenuata were compared over a broad range of animal sizes to determine in detail the ability to regulate proportions during regeneration. The three components of the head, namely hypostome, tentacles, and tentacle zone from which the tentacles emerge, the body column, and the basal disc were all measured separately. Ectodermal cell number was used as the measure of size. The results showed that the basal disc proportioned exactly over a 40-fold size range, and the tentacle tissue proportioned exactly over a 20-fold size range. In contrast, the hypostome and tentacle zone proportioned allometrically. With decreasing size, the hypostome and tentacle zone became an increasing fraction of the animal at the expense of body tissue, and in the very smallest regenerates at the expense of tentacle tissue. In their current form, the reaction-diffusion models proposed for pattern regulation in hydra are not consistent with the data.  相似文献   

16.
 A gene encoding a receptor protein-tyrosine kinase closely related to the vertebrate insulin receptor has been identified in the Cnidarian Hydra vulgaris. The gene is expressed in both epithelial layers of the adult polyp. A particularly high level of expression is seen in the ectoderm of the proximal portions of the tentacles and in a ring of ectodermal cells at the border between the foot basal disk and body column. The expression pattern of the gene in asexual buds is dynamic; expression is high throughout the newly emerging bud but the area of high expression becomes restricted to the apex as the bud lengthens. When the bud begins hypostome and tentacle formation, a high level of expression appears at the bases of the emerging tentacles. Finally, a ring of high expression appears just above the foot of the bud, completing the pattern seen in the adult polyp. The presence of this receptor and its pattern of expression suggested that an endogenous molecule related to insulin plays a role in regulating cell division in the body column and in differentiation of the tentacle and foot cells in Hydra, with the switch between the two being determined by the level of the receptor. Treatment of Hydra polyps with mammalian insulin caused an increase in the number of ectodermal and endodermal cells undergoing DNA synthesis. Received: 19 April 1996 / Accepted: 5 July 1996  相似文献   

17.
The precision with which an almost uniform sheet of hydra cells develops into a complete animal was measured quantitatively. Pieces of tissue of varying dimensions were cut from the body column of an adult hydra and allowed to regenerate. The regenerated animals were assayed for number of heads (hypostomes plus tentacle rings), head attempts (body tentacles), and basal discs. To ascertain whether the head and body were reformed in normal proportions, the average number of epithelial cells in the heads and bodies was measured. Pieces of tissue, from 12 to 120 an adult in size, formed heads that were a constant fraction of the regenerate. Thus, over a 10-fold size range, a proportioning mechanism was operating to divide the tissue into head area and body area quite precisely, but appeared to reach limits at the extremes of the range. However, the regenerates were not all normal miniatures with one hypostome and one basal disc. As the width-length ratio of the cut piece was increased beyond the circumference-length ratio of the intact body column, the incidence of extra hypostomes in the “head” and body tentacles and extra basal discs in the “body” rose dramatically. A proportioning mechanism based on the Gierer-Meinhardt model for pattern formation is presented to explain the results.  相似文献   

18.
The Cnidarian, hydra, is an appealing model system for studying the basic processes underlying pattern formation. Classical studies have elucidated much basic information regarding the role of development gradients, and theoretical models have been quite successful at describing experimental results. However, most experiments and computer simulations have dealt with isolated patterning events such as the dynamics of head regeneration. More global events such as interactions among the head, bud, and foot patterning systems have not been extensively addressed. The characterization of monoclonal antibodies with position-specific labeling patterns and the recent cloning and characterization of genes expressed in position-specific manners now provide the tools for investigating global interactions between patterning systems. In particular, changes in the axial positional value gradient may be monitored in response to experimental perturbation. Rather than studying isolated patterning events, this approach allows us to study patterning over the entire animal. The studies reported here focus on interactions between the foot and the head patterning systems in Hydra vulgaris following induction of a foot in close proximity to a head, axial grafting of a foot closer to the head, or doubling the amount of basal tissue by lateral grafting of an additional peduncle-foot onto host animals. Resulting positional value changes as monitored by antigen (TS19) and gene (ks1 and CnNK-2) expression were assessed in the foot, head, and intervening tissue. The results of the experiments indicate that positional values changed rapidly, in a matter of hours, and that there were reciprocal interactions between the foot and the head patterning systems. Theoretical interpretations of the results in the form of computer simulations based on the reaction-diffusion model are presented and predict many, but not all, of the experimental observations. Since the lateral grafting experiment cannot, at present, be simulated, it is discussed in light of what has been learned from the axial grafting experiments and their simulations.  相似文献   

19.
Form regulation and bud induction were studied in a non-buddingstrain of Chlorohydra viridissima. Regeneration at a cut surfacein a column piece with an existing hydranth was observed andfound to be dependent on the column length Another aspect ofform regulation, formation and control of supernumerary tentacles,was investigated by grafting. Supernumerary tentacle formationin long polyps can be suppressed by implants of hypostomal orsubhypostomal tissue. Non-budding hydra can be induced to bud by implanting smallpieces of normal tissue into their columns. The cellular basisof this process was investigated by means of grafting, radioautography,and histological methods. No differences in the proportionsor appearances of the cell types were observed between non-buddingand normal animals. However, induced buds have higher proportionsof interstitial cells and their derivatives (nerves and nematoblasts)than do normal buds. Many of these interstitial cells and derivativesoriginate from cells in the grafted implant. Normal tissue fromwhich interstitial cells have been previously removed will notinduce buds in non-budding hydra. The non-budding syndrome is probably related to a deficiencyin interstitial cell differentiation. If nerve cells are involvedin bud initiation and form regulation, these results suggestinterstitial cells of non-budding hydra are unable to transforminto sufficiently active and/or numerous nerve cells to controlthose processes.  相似文献   

20.
Formation of the head organizer in hydra involves the canonical Wnt pathway   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Stabilization of beta-catenin by inhibiting the activity of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta has been shown to initiate axis formation or axial patterning processes in many bilaterians. In hydra, the head organizer is located in the hypostome, the apical portion of the head. Treatment of hydra with alsterpaullone, a specific inhibitor of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta, results in the body column acquiring characteristics of the head organizer, as measured by transplantation experiments, and by the expression of genes associated with the head organizer. Hence, the role of the canonical Wnt pathway for the initiation of axis formation was established early in metazoan evolution.  相似文献   

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