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1.
Anural development in the ascidian Molgula occulta was examined using tissue-specific markers and interspecific hybridization. Unlike most ascidians, which develop into a swimming tadpole larva (urodele development), M. occulta eggs develop into a tailless slug-like larva (anural development) which metamorphoses into an adult. M. occulta embryos show conventional early cleavage patterns, gastrulation, and neurulation, but then diverge from the urodele developmental mode during larval morphogenesis. M. occulta larvae do not contain a pigmented sensory cell in their brain or form a tail with differentiated notochord and muscle cells. As shown by in situ hybridization with cloned probes and analysis of in vitro translation products, M. occulta embryos do not accumulate high levels of alpha actin or myosin heavy chain mRNA. In contrast, acetylcholinesterase is expressed in muscle lineage cells, indicating that various muscle cell features are differentially suppressed. M. occulta embryos also lack tyrosinase activity, suggesting that suppression of brain pigment cell differentiation occurs at an early step in development. M. occulta eggs fertilized with sperm from Molgula oculata (a closely related urodele species) develop into hybrid larvae exhibiting some of the missing urodele features. Some hybrid embryos develop tyrosinase activity and differentiate a brain pigment cell and a short row of notochord cells, and form a short tail. These urodele features appeared together or separately in different hybrid embryos suggesting that they develop by independent mechanisms. In contrast, alpha actin and myosin heavy chain mRNA accumulation was not enhanced in hybrid embryos. These results suggest that multiple mechanisms control anural development.  相似文献   

2.
Anural ascidians do not develop into a conventional tailed larva with differentiated muscle cells, however, embryos of some anural ascidian species retain the ability to express acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in a vestigial muscle cell lineage. This study examines the number of AChE-positive cells that develop in the anural ascidian Molgula occulta relative to that in the closely related urodele (tailed) species, Molgula oculata. Histochemical assays showed that M. oculata embryos develop 36 to 38 AChE-positive cells, consistent with the number of tail muscle cells expressed in other urodele ascidians. In contrast, M. occulta embryos develop a mean of only 20 AChE-positive cells in their vestigial muscle lineage. Cleavage-arrested embryos of the anural species express AChE only in B-line blastomeres, showing that the vestigial muscle lineage cells are derived from the primary muscle lineage. Less than the expected number of AChE-positive B-line cells develop in cleavage-arrested anural embryos, however, implying that the allocation of primary muscle lineage cells is decreased. Eggs of the anural species can be fertilized with sperm of the urodele species resulting in the development of some larvae that contain a short tail and/or a brain melanocyte, specific features of urodele larvae. The typical urodele number of AChE-positive cells is restored in some of these hybrid embryos. Both primary and secondary muscle lineages are restored because cleavage-arrested hybrid embryos develop more AChE-positive cells in the B-line blastomeres and supernumerary AChE-positive cells in the A-line blastomeres. Hybrid embryos that develop the urodele complement of AChE-positive cells also form a tail and/or a brain melanocyte showing that restoration of muscle lineage cells is coupled to the development of other urodele features. AChE expression occurred in anural embryos with disorganized or dissociated blastomeres, indicating that AChE expression is determined autonomously. It is concluded that an evolutionary change in the allocation of larval muscle lineage cells occurs during development of the anural ascidian M. occulta which can be restored by interspecific hybridization with the urodele ascidian M. oculata.  相似文献   

3.
The myoplasm of ascidian eggs is a localized cytoskeletal domain that is segregated to presumptive larval tail muscle cells during embryonic development. We have identified a cytoskeletal protein recognized by a vertebrate neurofilament monoclonal antibody (NN18) which is concentrated in the myoplasm in eggs and embryos of a variety of ascidian species. The NN18 antigen is localized in the periphery of unfertilized eggs, segregates with the myoplasm after fertilization, and enters the larval tail muscle cells during embryonic development. Western blots of one-dimensional and two-dimensional gels showed that the major component recognized by NN18 antibody is a 58 x 10(3) Mr protein (p58), which exists in at least three different isoforms. The enrichment of p58 in the Triton X-100-insoluble fraction of eggs and its reticular staining pattern in eggs and embryos suggests that it is a cytoskeletal protein. In subsequent experiments, p58 was used as a marker to determine whether changes in the myoplasm occur in eggs of anural ascidian species, i.e. those exhibiting a life cycle lacking tadpole larvae with differentiated muscle cells. Although p58 was localized in the myoplasm in eggs of four urodele ascidian species that develop into swimming tadpole larvae, this protein was distributed uniformly in eggs of three anural ascidian species. The eggs of two of these anural species contained the actin lamina, another component of the myoplasm, whereas the third anural species lacked the actin lamina. There was no detectible localization of p58 after fertilization or segregation into muscle lineage cells during cleavage of anural eggs. NN18 antigen was uniformly distributed in pre-vitellogenic oocytes and then localized in the perinuclear zone during vitellogenesis of urodele and anural ascidians. Subsequently, NN18 antigen was concentrated in the peripheral cytoplasm of post-vitellogenic oocytes and mature eggs of urodele, but not anural, ascidians. It is concluded that the myoplasm of ascidian eggs contains an intermediate filament-like cytoskeletal network which is missing in anural species that have modified or eliminated the tadpole larva.  相似文献   

4.
Programmed cell death (PCD) has been discounted in the ascidian embryo because the descendants of every embryonic cell appear to be present in the tadpole larva. Here we show that apoptotic PCD is initiated in the epidermis and central nervous system (CNS) but not in the endoderm, mesenchyme, muscle, and notochord cells during embryogenesis in molgulid ascidians. However, the affected cells do not actually die until the beginning of metamorphosis. Although specific patterns of PCD were different in distantly related ascidian species, the results suggest that removal of CNS cells by apoptosis is a urchordate feature predating the origin of the vertebrates. Certain molgulid ascidian species have evolved an anural (tailless) larva in which notochord cells fail to undergo the morphogenetic movements culminating in tail development. These anural species include Molgula occulta, the sister species of the urodele (tailed) species Molgula oculata. We show that PCD in the notochord cell lineage precedes the arrest of tail development in M. occulta and other independently evolved anural species. The notochord cells are rescued from PCD and a tail develops in hybrid embryos produced by fertilizing M. occulta eggs with M. oculata sperm, implying that apoptosis is controlled zygotically. Antisense inhibition experiments show that zygotic expression of the FoxA5 and Manx genes is required to prevent notochord PCD in urodele species and hybrids with restored tails. The results provide the first indication of PCD in the ascidian embryo and suggest that apoptosis modulated by FoxA5 and Manx is involved in notochord and tail regression during anural development. Differences in PCD that occur between ascidian species suggest that diversity in programming apoptosis may explain differences in larval form.  相似文献   

5.
The ascidian Molgula oculata has a tailed (or urodele) larva, whereas Molgula occulta develops directly via a tailless (or anural) embryo. Interspecific hybrid embryos produced by fertilizing M. occulta eggs with M. oculata sperm (M. occulta x M. oculata hybrids) can develop urodele larval structures, including a brain pigment cell and a short tail containing a small notochord. Development of larval features differs in individual M. occulta clutches: some eggs develop into hybrids with both a brain pigment cell and a tail, some into hybrids with either a brain pigment cell or a tail, and others into hybrids without urodele features. The expression of a 58-kDa protein (p58), which is present in eggs and embryos of urodele ascidians but lacking in those of most anural species, also varies in expression between different clutches of M. occulta eggs. Western blot and immunofluorescence studies show that p58 expression is correlated with the ability of hybrid embryos to express urodele features. For example, clutches of M. occulta eggs containing relatively high levels of p58 produce many hybrids with both a brain pigment cell and a tail. Differential expression of p58 occurs during oogenesis in M. occulta individuals: p58 is found at similar levels in previtellogenic oocytes, but in some animals it disappears during vitellogenesis, while in others it persists throughout oogenesis and is present in mature eggs. When M. occulta eggs are extracted with Triton X-100, p58 remains in the detergent-insoluble fraction, suggesting that it is associated with the cytoskeleton. In most unfertilized M. occulta eggs, p58 is uniformly distributed, but after fertilization it is localized in the uncleaved zygote and then concentrated in embryonic ectoderm, notochord, and muscle lineage cells. Despite containing high levels of p58, gynogenetic hybrid embryos, produced by fertilizing M. occulta eggs with uv-irradiated M. oculata sperm, develop into hybrids without a brain pigment cell or a tail. The results suggest that both a functional paternal genome and p58 are necessary for restoration of larval features in M. occulta x M. oculata hybrids. The cytoskeletal complex containing p58 may mediate the localization of key maternal factors in the egg or may be involved in cellular interactions during embryogenesis which are responsible for development of urodele cell fates.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Tadpole development is eliminated in the life cycle of the ascidian Molgula pacifica. The elimination of a tailed larva is termed anural development, in contrast to urodele development which is exhibited by most ascidian species. In the present study, transmission electron microscopy and histochemistry were used to gain a better understanding of anural development in M. pacifica. The fine structure of M. pacifica oocytes and fertilized eggs was similar to urodele oocytes and eggs, except that a perivitelline space and test cells were absent. M. pacifica embryos exhibited the typical cleavage pattern of urodele embryos. Gastrulation was initiated at the vegetal pole, as in urodeles, and occurred at the same time as in two urodele species (Molgula manhattensis and Pyura haustor). However, changes in cell shapes and cell movements of the vegetal pole cells that participate in gastrulation were highly modified compared to commonly studied ascidians. The changes in shapes and movements of the vegetal pole cells were minimal and resulted in embryos having a very small archenteron and blastopore. The presence of large, yolky cells in the interior of the embryo likely restricted vegetal cell movements. Two ultrastructurally distinct types of epidermal cells were evident at the gastrula stage. When gastrulae were manually dechorionated from their surrounding mucous-follicular envelope layers, the embryos were already surrounded by a thin tunic. When day 1 juveniles in the process of hatching were sectioned along the anterior-posterior axis, regional differences in cell types were evident. Differentiated muscle cells in the posterior region were not evident. Day 1 M. pacifica juveniles, anural-developing M. provisionalis juveniles and tadpoles from three urodele species were tested for their abilities to express AchE activity. The highest levels of AchE activity were detected in the larval tail muscle cells of urodeles, low levels of activity were detected in the posterior region of M. provisionalis juveniles, whereas M. pacifica juveniles did not exhibit AchE activity. The results are discussed in terms of evolutionary mechanisms responsible for anural development in ascidians. Offprint requests to: W.R. Bates  相似文献   

7.
Terminal amounts of tyrosinase (EC 1.10.3.1) activity and melanin pigment in the giant melanocytes of cleavage-arrestedCiona intestinalis (L.) embryos are regulated independently of cell size and number of nuclei in the cells. Embryos were cleavage-arrested in cytochalasin B at a time before the last two divisions of the melanocyte lineage took place. The resulting two giant melanocytes, one from each of the two bilateral melanocyte lineages, developed tyrosinase and melanin. The cells were about three times larger in volume than the normal larval melanocytes and each contained four nuclei instead of just one. Quantitative measurements of melanin synthesized and tyrosinase activity in embryos with the giant melanocytes revealed amounts identical to those found in normal embryos. This specification of exact quantities differs markedly from the situation in mammalian melanocytes where cell volume and gene dosage influence the extent of melanotic differentiation. Quantitative control of differentiation in ascidian melanocytes appears to be mediated by a cytoplasmic determinant segregated through the melanocyte lineage and inherited by one daughter at each division of the lineages.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Ascidians exhibit two different modes of development. A tadpole larva is formed during urodele development, whereas the larval phase is modified or absent during anural development. Anural development is restricted to a small number of species in one or possibly two ascidian families and is probably derived from ancestors with urodele development. Anural and urodele ascidians constitute a model system in which to study the evolution of development, but the phylogeny of anural development has not been resolved. Classification based on larval characters suggests that anural species are monophyletic, whereas classification according to adult morphology suggests they are polyphyletic. In the present study, we have inferred the origin of anural development using rDNA sequences. The central region of 18S rDNA and the hypervariable D2 loop of 28S rDNA were amplified from the genomic DNA of anural and urodele ascidian species by the polymerase chain reaction and sequenced. Phylogenetic trees inferred from 18S rDNA sequences of 21 species placed anural developers into two discrete groups corresponding to the Styelidae and Molgulidae, suggesting that anural development evolved independently in these families. Furthermore, the 18S rDNA trees inferred at least four independent origins of anural development in the family Molgulidae. Phylogenetic trees inferred from the D2 loop sequences of 13 molgulid species confirmed the 18S rDNA phylogeny. Anural development appears to have evolved rapidly because some anural species are placed as closely related sister groups to urodele species. The phylogeny inferred from rDNA sequences is consistent with molgulid systematics according to adult morphology and supports the polyphyletic origin of anural development in ascidians. Correspondence to: W.R. Jeffery  相似文献   

10.
SYNOPSIS. In the present study the timing of metamorphosis inan anural ascidian, Molgula pacifica, was compared to metamorphosisin a urodele species Boltenia villosa. Metamorphosis in M. pacificawas triggered at a fixed time in development (32–36 hoursafter fertilization), just prior to hatching. In contrast, metamorphosiswas triggered in B. villosa after the hatched larvae respondedto substrate cues. The timing of metamorphosisin B. villosawas often delayed for up to four days, whereas delays in M.pacifica were not observed. An antibody, termed Epi-3, was foundto cross-react exclusively with epidermal cells in both species.The binding of FITC-labelled Epi-3 was very low prior to metamorphosisand then it increased dramatically after metamorphosis was triggered.The cytoplasm of ampulla tip cells and the tunic immediatelysurrounding each ampulla showed the highest levels of Epi-3fluorescence. The histological and ultrastructural featuresof the ampulla cells suggest that Epi-3 antibody recognizesgranules localized in the apical cytoplasm. How the evolution of an internal "clock" mechanism responsiblefor initiating metamorphosis may be beneficial to anural speciesis discussed. One possibility is that the anural type of timingmechanism reduces mortality rates during this critical phaseof its life cycle.  相似文献   

11.
In anural (tailless) ascidian species, functional embryonic muscle is not formed. In urodele (tailed) ascidians, macho-1 functions as a maternally supplied factor for embryonic muscle formation. The failure of embryonic muscle development in anural ascidians may be due to the suppression of macho-1 expression. In this paper, however, we report the expression of macho-1 in embryos of an anural ascidian, Molgula tectiformis. Although M. tectiformis has lost the developmental potential to form functional embryonic muscle, macho-1 was expressed in a very similar manner as in urodele ascidians. This result, together with those of previous studies, strongly suggests that in M. tectiformis the upstream genetic cascade responsible for muscle formation is intact, while the downstream cascade including the expression of muscle structural genes is severely affected.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available for this article at  相似文献   

12.
Migratory neural crest-like cells, which express the cell surface antigen HNK-1 and develop into pigment cells, have recently been identified in the ascidian Ecteinascidia turbinata. Here we use HNK-1 expression as a marker to determine whether neural crest-like cells are responsible for pigment development in diverse ascidian species. We surveyed HNK-1 expression and tyrosinase activity in 12 ascidian species, including those with different adult organizations, developmental modes, and larval sizes and complexities. We observed HNK-1 positive cells in every species, although the timing of HNK-1 expression varied according to the extent of larval complexity. HNK-1 expression was initiated during the late tailbud stage in species in which adult features are formed precociously in large complex larvae. In contrast, HNK-1 positive cells did not appear until the swimming tadpole or juvenile stage in species with small simple larvae in which most adult features appear after metamorphosis. Double labeling experiments indicated that HNK-1 and tyrosinase are expressed in the same subset of pigment-forming mesenchymal cells in species with complex or simple larvae. In addition, the absence of HNK-1 and tyrosinase expression in albino morphs of the colonial ascidian Botryllus schlosseri suggested that the major fate of neural crest-like cells is to become pigment cells. The results suggest that ascidian neural crest-like cells and vertebrate neural crest cells had a common origin during chordate evolution and that their primitive function was to generate body pigmentation.  相似文献   

13.
1. The ascidian Molgula arenata produces an anural larva lacking a tail and other structural features of typical urodele larvae in the family Molglidae, yet its embryos developed a histochemically detectable acetylcholinesterase in the tail muscle rudiment. Development of the myoblasts seemed to fail during the neurula stage. 2. Larval enzyme activity occurred at a mean of 5--6% of the level found in the urodele species Molgula occidentalis and Molgula manhattensis, as measured by scanning integrating microdensitometry of the histochemical reaction product. Some anural larvae had as much as 20% of the enzyme activity in urodele larvae. 3. This example of vestigial expression in the absence of other urodele larval features further illustrates the autonomy of a histospecific enzyme development thought to be controlled by an egg cytoplasmic determinant. Partial suppression of the determinant might be the cause of this diminished expression. 4. Two other anural molgulid species, Molgula occulta and Bostrichobranchus pilularis, did not have vestigial larval enzyme and possibly have lost the determinant completely.  相似文献   

14.
Tyrosinase activity appears in the presumptive pigment cells of ascidian embryos (Ciona intestinalis) several hours before the cells begin to synthesize melanin. These presumptive pigment cells develop into the otolith and ocellus pigment cells of the larval brain. Tyrosinase was identified by histochemical tests for tyrosine oxidase and dopa oxidase; both reactions were sensitive to tyrosinase inhibitors. Studies with puromycin suggested that tyrosinase was synthesized at the time it was first detected histochemically and that it was stable during the time interval before melanin synthesis. Supernumerary tyrosinase-containing cells were found adjacent to the presumptive pigment cells in three ascidian species examined (C. intestinalis, Styela partita, and Molgula manhattensis). Tyrosinase disappeared from the supernumerary pigment cells during larval development and these cells did not synthesize melanin.Tyrosinase in the presumptive and supernumerary pigment cells is apparently a functional enzyme which does not interact with substrate. External substrates ( -tyrosine and -dopa) did not react with enzyme in the living cells before the normal time of pigment synthesis, but gentle disruption of the cells (by freezing-and-thawing or osmotic shock) released active tyrosinase. Progessive enlargement of nonpigmented vesicles in the otolith cells of embryos exposed to phenylthiourea, an inhibitor of tyrosinase activity, suggested that tyrosinase vesicles actively accumulate tyrosine at the beginning of melanin synthesis. This tyrosine accumulation probably initiates melanin synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Muscle and brain pigment cell specification was studied by disrupting cell adhesion, cell dissociation, and reaggregation in embryos of the ascidianStyela clava. Treatment of embryos with Ca2+-free sea water between the 2-cell and gastrula stages disrupted blastomere adhesion but did not prevent acetylcholinesterase or muscle actin expression in presumptive muscle cells. Similar treatments initiated between the 2- and 32-cell stages caused more ectoderm cells to express tyrosinase and develop pigment granules than expected from the cell lineage. Whereas 2 pigment cells become the otolith and ocellus sensory organs in normal embryos, up to 33 pigment cells could differentiate in embryos after disruption of cell adhesion. Replacement of Ca2+-free sea water with normal sea water restored cell adhesion and usually resulted in development of embryos containing the conventional number of pigment cells. Dissociation of embryos into single cells between the 2- and 64-cell stages and culture of these cells beyond the fate restricted stage had no effect on the accumulation of muscle actin mRNA and muscle actin synthesis, but blocked pigment cell differentiation. Reaggregation of the dissociated cells did not enhance the number of cells that developed muscle features, but rescued pigment cell development. The results indicate that ascidian muscle cell specification occurs by an autonomous mechanism, whereas pigment cell specification occurs by a conditional mechanism involving cell interactions. In addition, the results suggest that negative cell interactions may restrict the potential for pigment cell development in the ectoderm of cleaving ascidian embryos.  相似文献   

16.
In vertebrates, melanins produced in specialized pigment cells are required for visual acuity, camouflage, sexual display and protection from ultra violet (UV) radiation. There are three pigment cell types that are classified based on their distinct embryonic origins. Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells originate from the outer layer of the optic cup. Pigment cells of the pineal organ are formed from the developing diencephalon. Melanocytes are derived from the neural crest unique to vertebrate embryos. Some of these pigment cells also play roles that are independent of the activity of tyrosinase, the key melanogenesis enzyme, or melanin: production of substrate(s) for catecholamine synthesis, maintenance of endolymph composition in the cochlea, maintenance of photoreceptor cells in the retina and retinoid metabolism essential for the visual cycle. To deduce the evolutionary origins of vertebrate pigment cells and a possible archetypal genetic circuitry, which may have been modified and utilized to generate multiple pigment cell types, comparison of developmental mechanisms of pigment cells between vertebrates and closely related invertebrate ascidians are proposed to provide useful information. The tadpole-type larva of ascidians possesses two melanin-containing pigment cells, termed the otolith and ocellus pigment cells, in the brain that are believed to be required for photo- and geotactic responses during swimming. In this review, current knowledge on the development of the two ascidian pigment cells is summarized, i.e. complete cell lineage, structure and expression of genes encoding two melanogenesis enzymes, and molecular developmental mechanisms involving BMP-CHORDIN antagonism, and possible evolutionary relationships between ascidian and vertebrate pigment cells are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
In vertebrates, melanins produced in specialized pigment cells are required for visual acuity, camouflage, sexual display and protection from ultra violet (UV) radiation. There are three pigment cell types that are classified based on their distinct embryonic origins. Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells originate from the outer layer of the optic cup. Pigment cells of the pineal organ are formed from the developing diencephalon. Melanocytes are derived from the neural crest unique to vertebrate embryos. Some of these pigment cells also play roles that are independent of the activity of tyrosinase, the key melanogenesis enzyme, or melanin: production of substrate(s) for catecholamine synthesis, maintenance of endolymph composition in the cochlea, maintenance of photoreceptor cells in the retina and retinoid metabolism essential for the visual cycle. To deduce the evolutionary origins of vertebrate pigment cells and a possible archetypal genetic circuitry, which may have been modified and utilized to generate multiple pigment cell types, comparison of developmental mechanisms of pigment cells between vertebrates and closely related invertebrate ascidians are proposed to provide useful information. The tadpole‐type larva of ascidians possesses two melanin‐containing pigment cells, termed the otolith and ocellus pigment cells, in the brain that are believed to be required for photo‐ and geotactic responses during swimming. In this review, current knowledge on the development of the two ascidian pigment cells is summarized, i.e. complete cell lineage, structure and expression of genes encoding two melanogenesis enzymes, and molecular developmental mechanisms involving BMP‐CHORDIN antagonism, and possible evolutionary relationships between ascidian and vertebrate pigment cells are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of ultraviolet (uv) light on embryonic development was examined in the ascidian Styela clava. uv irradiation (3.0 x 10(-3) J mm-2) of the entire surface of fertilized eggs during ooplasmic segregation prevented gastrulation, sensory cell induction, and embryonic axis formation. The uv-irradiated embryos completed ooplasmic segregation and cleaved normally, but vegetal blastomeres did not invaginate at the beginning of gastrulation, sensory cells in the larval brain did not develop tyrosinase or melanin pigment, and the larval tail did not develop. Endoderm, epidermis, and muscle cells differentiated in the uv-irradiated embryos, however, as evidenced by expression of endodermal alkaline phosphatase (AP), an epidermal-specific antigen, and alpha-actin, myosin heavy chain, and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in muscle cells. Higher doses of uv light (6.0-9.0 x 10(-3) J mm-2) suppressed expression of the epidermal antigen and muscle cell markers, whereas the development of endodermal AP was insensitive. Irradiation at various times between fertilization and the 16-cell stage revealed that gastrulation, sensory cell differentiation, and axis formation are sensitive to uv light only during ooplasmic segregation. Irradiation of restricted regions of the zygote during ooplasmic segregation showed that the uv-sensitive components are localized in the vegetal hemisphere. The absorption characteristics of the uv-sensitive components suggest that they are nucleic acids. The results show that uv-sensitive components that specify gastrulation, sensory cell induction, and embryonic axis formation are localized in the vegetal hemisphere of Styela eggs.  相似文献   

19.
Epidermal melanocytes play an important role in protecting the skin from UV rays, and their functional impairment results in pigment disorders. Additionally, melanomas are considered to arise from mutations that accumulate in melanocyte stem cells. The mechanisms underlying melanocyte differentiation and the defining characteristics of melanocyte stem cells in humans are, however, largely unknown. In the present study, we set out to generate melanocytes from human iPS cells in vitro, leading to a preliminary investigation of the mechanisms of human melanocyte differentiation. We generated iPS cell lines from human dermal fibroblasts using the Yamanaka factors (SOX2, OCT3/4, and KLF4, with or without c-MYC). These iPS cell lines were subsequently used to form embryoid bodies (EBs) and then differentiated into melanocytes via culture supplementation with Wnt3a, SCF, and ET-3. Seven weeks after inducing differentiation, pigmented cells expressing melanocyte markers such as MITF, tyrosinase, SILV, and TYRP1, were detected. Melanosomes were identified in these pigmented cells by electron microscopy, and global gene expression profiling of the pigmented cells showed a high similarity to that of human primary foreskin-derived melanocytes, suggesting the successful generation of melanocytes from iPS cells. This in vitro differentiation system should prove useful for understanding human melanocyte biology and revealing the mechanism of various pigment cell disorders, including melanoma.  相似文献   

20.
The forkhead gene FH1 encodes a HNF-3beta protein required for gastrulation and development of chordate features in the ascidian tadpole larva. Although most ascidian species develop via a tadpole larva, the conventional larva has regressed into an anural (tailless) larva in some species. Molgula oculata (the tailed species) exhibits a tadpole larva with chordate features (a dorsal neural sensory organ or otolith, a notochord, striated muscle cells, and a tail), whereas its sister species Molgula occulta (the tailless species) has evolved an anural larva, which has lost these features. Here we examine the role of FH1 in modifying the larval body plan in the tailless species. We also examine FH1 function in tailless speciesxtailed species hybrids, in which the otolith, notochord, and tail are restored. The FH1 gene is expressed primarily in the presumptive endoderm and notochord cells during gastrulation, neurulation, and larval axis formation in both species and hybrids. In the tailless species, FH1 expression is down-regulated after neurulation in concert with arrested otolith, notochord, and tail development. The FH1 expression pattern characteristic of the tailed species is restored in hybrid embryos prior to the development of chordate larval features. Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) shown previously to disrupt FH1 function were used to compare the developmental roles of this gene in both species and hybrids. As described previously, antisense FH1 ODNs inhibited endoderm invagination during gastrulation, notochord extension, and larval tail formation in the tailed species. Antisense FH1 ODNs also affected gastrulation in the tailless species, although the effects were less severe than in the tailed species, and an anural larva was formed. In hybrid embryos, antisense FH1 ODNs blocked restoration of the otolith, notochord, and tail, reverting the larva back to the anural state. The results suggest that changes in FH1 expression are involved in re-organizing the tadpole larva during the evolution of anural development.  相似文献   

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