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1.
Biomineralization is the process in which soft organic tissues use minerals to produce shells, skeletons and teeth for various functions such as protection and physical support. The ability of the cells to control the time and place of crystal nucleation as well as crystal orientation and stiffness is far beyond the state-of-the art of human technologies. Thus, understanding the biological control of biomineralization will promote our understanding of embryo development as well as provide novel approaches for material engineering. Sea urchin larval skeletogenesis offers an excellent platform for functional analyses of both the molecular control system and mineral uptake and deposition. Here we describe the current understanding of the genetic, molecular and cellular processes that underlie sea urchin larval skeletogenesis. We portray the regulatory genes that define the specification of the skeletogenic cells and drive the various morphogenetic processes that occur in the skeletogenic lineage, including: epithelial to mesenchymal transition, cell migration, spicule cavity formation and mineral deposition into the spicule cavity. We describe recent characterizations of the size, motion and mineral concentration of the calcium-bearing vesicles in the skeletogenic cells. We review the distinct specification states within the skeletogenic lineage that drive localized skeletal growth at the tips of the spicules. Finally, we discuss the surprising similarity between the regulatory network and cellular processes that drive sea urchin skeletogenesis and those that control vertebrate vascularization. Overall, we illustrate the novel insights on the biological regulation and evolution of biomineralization, gained from studies of the sea urchin larval skeletogenesis.  相似文献   

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The larval skeleton of sea urchin embryos is formed by primary mesenchyme cells (PMCs). Thereafter, the larvae start feeding and additional arms develop. An adult rudiment that contains spines, tube feet, tests, and other parts of the adult body is formed in the eight-armed larva. The cellular mechanism of the later skeletogenesis and the lineage of the adult skeletogenic cells are not known. In this study, the morphogenesis of larval and adult skeletons during larval development of the sea urchin Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus was investigated by immunostaining cells with PMC-specific monoclonal antibodies, which are useful markers of skeletogenic cells. All spicules and the associated cells in the later larvae were stained with the antibodies. We could observe the initiation of skeletal morphogenesis at each developmental stage and visualize the cellular basis of skeleton formation in whole-mount embryos that possessed an intact morphology. There were some similarities between PMCs and the later skeletogenic cells. Both had a rounded shape with some filopodia, and the antigen expression started just before overt spicule formation. In the later-stage embryos, cells with filopodia and faint antigen expression were observed migrating in the blastocoel or aggregating in the presumptive location of new skeletogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
In the sea urchin embryo, primary mesenchyme cells (PMCs) are committed early in development to direct skeletogenesis, provided that a permissive signal is conveyed from adjacent ectoderm cells. We showed that inhibition of extracellular matrix (ECM)-ectoderm cells interaction, by monoclonal antibodies (mAb) to Pl-nectin, causes an impairment of skeletogenesis and reduced expression of Pl-SM30, a spicule-specific matrix protein. When PMCs are experimentally removed, some secondary mesenchyme cells (SMCs) switch to skeletogenic fate. Here, for the first time we studied SMC transfating in PMC-less embryos of Paracentrotus lividus. We observed the appearance of skeletogenic cells within 10 h of PMCs removal, as shown by binding of wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) to cell surface molecules unique to PMCs. Interestingly, the number of WGA-positive cells, expressing also msp130, another PMC-specific marker, doubled with respect to that of PMCs present in normal embryos, though the number of SM30-expressing cells remained constant. In addition, we investigated the ability of SMCs to direct skeletogenesis in embryos exposed to mAbs to Pl-nectin after removal of PMCs. We found that, although phenotypic SMC transfating occurred, spicule development, as well as Pl-SM30-expression was strongly inhibited. These results demonstrate that ectoderm inductive signals are necessary for transfated SMCs to express genes needed for skeletogenesis.  相似文献   

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Cell lineage conversion in the sea urchin embryo   总被引:17,自引:1,他引:16  
The mesoderm of the sea urchin embryo conventionally is divided into two populations of cells; the primary mesenchyme cells (PMCs), which produce the larval skeleton, and the secondary mesenchyme cells (SMCs), which differentiate into a variety of cell types but do not participate in skeletogenesis. In this study we examine the morphogenesis of embryos from which the PMCs have been removed microsurgically. We confirm the observation of Fukushi (1962) that embryos lacking PMCs form a complete skeleton, although in a delayed fashion. We demonstrate by microsurgical and cell marking experiments that the appearance of skeletogenic cells in such PMC-deficient embryos is due exclusively to the conversion of other cells to the PMC phenotype. Time-lapse video recordings of PMC-deficient embryos indicate that the converting cells are a subpopulation of late-ingressing SMCs. The conversion of these cells to the skeletogenic phenotype is accompanied by their de novo expression of cell surface determinants normally unique to PMCs, as shown by binding of wheat germ agglutinin and a PMC-specific monoclonal antibody. Cell transplantation and cell marking experiments have been carried out to determine the number of SMCs that convert when intermediate numbers of PMCs are present in the embryo. These experiments indicate that the number of converting SMCs is inversely proportional to the number of PMCs in the blastocoel. In addition, they show that PMCs and converted SMCs cooperate to produce a skeleton that is correct in both size and configuration. This regulatory system should shed light on the nature of cell-cell interactions that control cell differentiation and on the way in which evolutionary processes modify developmental programs.  相似文献   

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SUMMARY Modularity is a salient feature of development and crucial to its evolution. This paper extends modularity to include the concept of gene expression territory, as established for sea urchin embryos. Territories provide a mechanism for partitioning of the cells of a rapidly developing embryo into functional units of a feeding larva. Territories exhibit the characteristics of modules. The paper asks if the embryo and the nonfeeding larva of the direct-developing sea urchin Heliocidaris erythrogramma are organized into gene expression territories, and if its territories correspond to the canonical territories of the pluteus. An analysis of cell lineage and gene expression data for H. erythrogramma shows that skeletogenic cell, coelomic, and vegetal plate gene expression territories are conserved, although they arise from cell lineages distinct from those of the pluteus, and the overall morphology of the larva differs from that of a pluteus. The ectoderm, as in indirect developers, is divided into territories. However, the oral ectodermal territory characteristic of the pluteus is absent in H. erythrogramma. Oral ectoderm is restored in hybrids of H. erythrogramma eggs fertilized by Heliocidaris tuberculata sperm. This indicates that embryonic modules evolve by changes in expression of dominant regulatory genes within territories and that entire modules can be eliminated in evolution of embryos.  相似文献   

10.
In many embryos specification toward one cell fate can be diverted to a different cell fate through a reprogramming process. Understanding how that process works will reveal insights into the developmental regulatory logic that emerged from evolution. In the sea urchin embryo, cells at gastrulation were found to reprogram and replace missing cell types after surgical dissections of the embryo. Non-skeletogenic mesoderm (NSM) cells reprogrammed to replace missing skeletogenic mesoderm cells and animal caps reprogrammed to replace all endomesoderm. In both cases evidence of reprogramming onset was first observed at the early gastrula stage, even if the cells to be replaced were removed earlier in development. Once started however, the reprogramming occurred with compressed gene expression dynamics. The NSM did not require early contact with the skeletogenic cells to reprogram, but the animal cap cells gained the ability to reprogram early in gastrulation only after extended contact with the vegetal halves prior to that time. If the entire vegetal half was removed at early gastrula, the animal caps reprogrammed and replaced the vegetal half endomesoderm. If the animal caps carried morpholinos to either hox11/13b or foxA (endomesoderm specification genes), the isolated animal caps failed to reprogram. Together these data reveal that the emergence of a reprogramming capability occurs at early gastrulation in the sea urchin embryo and requires activation of early specification components of the target tissues.  相似文献   

11.
During development, cell migration plays an important role in morphogenetic processes. The construction of the skeleton of the sea urchin embryo by a small number of cells, the primary mesenchyme cells (PMCs), offers a remarkable model to study cell migration and its involvement in morphogenesis. During gastrulation, PMCs migrate and become positioned along the ectodermal wall following a stereotypical pattern that determines skeleton morphology. Previous studies have shown that interactions between ectoderm and PMCs regulate several aspects of skeletal morphogenesis, but little is known at the molecular level. Here we show that VEGF signaling between ectoderm and PMCs is crucial in this process. The VEGF receptor (VEGFR) is expressed exclusively in PMCs, whereas VEGF expression is restricted to two small areas of the ectoderm, in front of the positions where the ventrolateral PMC clusters that initiate skeletogenesis will form. Overexpression of VEGF leads to skeletal abnormalities, whereas inhibition of VEGF/VEGFR signaling results in incorrect positioning of the PMCs, downregulation of PMC-specific genes and loss of skeleton. We present evidence that localized VEGF acts as both a guidance cue and a differentiation signal, providing a crucial link between the positioning and differentiation of the migrating PMCs and leading to morphogenesis of the embryonic skeleton.  相似文献   

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Primary mesenchyme cells (PMCs) are solely responsible for the skeletogenesis during early larval development of the sea urchin, but the cells responsible for late larval and adult skeletal formation are not clear. To investigate the origin of larval and adult skeletogenic cells, I first performed transplantation experiments in Pseudocentrotus depressus and Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus, which have different skeletal phenotypes. When P. depressus PMCs were transplanted into H. pulcherrimus embryos, the donor phenotype was observed only in the early larval stage, whereas when secondary mesenchyme cells (SMCs) were transplanted, the donor phenotype was observed in late and metamorphic larvae. Second, a reporter construct driven by the spicule matrix protein 50 (SM50) promoter was introduced into fertilized eggs and their PMCs/SMCs were transplanted. In the resultant 6-armed pluteus, green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression was observed in both PMC and SMC transplantations, suggesting SMC participation in late skeletogenesis. Third, transplanted PMCs or SMCs tagged with GFP were analyzed by PCR in the transgenic chimeras. As a result, SMCs were detected in both larval and adult stages, but GFP from PMCs was undetectable after metamorphosis. Thus, it appears that SMCs participate in skeletogenesis in late development and that PMCs disappear in the adult sea urchin, suggesting that the skeletogenesis may pass from PMCs to SMCs during the late larval stage.  相似文献   

13.
After fertilization, two types of cortical vesicles ware examined under the electron microscope (the cortical vesicle I and II) and the light microscope (pigment granules and another kind of vesicles). The cortical vesicle I corresponds to the pigment granule and the cortical vesicle II does to the other vesicle.
The unequal division of the sea urchin embryo which occurs at the fourth cleavage was modified to an equal cleavage pattern by the treatment with sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) or cetyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB). But other surfactants such as sodium deoxycholate, Tween 80, Lubrol PX did not have such an effect. The cell surface of the embryo which had been treated either SLS or CTAB became rough or smooth. Cortical vesicles and pigment granules disappeared and/or were dislocated from the cortex. However, cell organelles were as normal as the control. On the other hand, the cortical appearance of other surfactant-treated embryos showed no disturbance and cell organelles were also more or less normal. Therefore, the equalization of unequal cleavage is caused by the disturbance in the cortex and thus the cortex plays a major role on the micromere formation at the 16-cell stage and on the further sea urchin development.  相似文献   

14.
The purification, biochemical characterization and functional features of a novel extracellular matrix protein are described. This protein is a component of the basal lamina found in embryos from the sea urchin species Paracentrotus lividus and Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus . The protein has been named PI-200 K or Hp-200 K, respectively, because of the species from which it was isolated and its apparent molecular weight in SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions. It has been purified from unfertilized eggs where it is found packed within cytoplasmic granules, and has different binding affinities to type I collagen and heparin, as assessed by affinity chromatography columns. By indirect immunofluorescence experiments it was shown that, upon fertilization, the protein becomes extracellular, polarized at the basal surface of ectoderm cells, and on the surface of primary mesenchyme cells at the blastula and gastrula stages. The protein serves as an adhesive substrate, as shown by an in vitro binding assay where cells dissociated from blastula embryos were settled on 200K protein-coated substrates. To examine the involvement of the protein in morphogenesis of sea urchin embryo, early blastula embryos were microinjected with anti-200K Fab fragments and further development was followed. When control embryos reached the pluteus stage, microinjected embryos showed severe abnormalities in arms and skeleton elongation and patterning. On the basis of current results, it was proposed that 200K protein is involved in the regulation of sea urchin embryo skeletogenesis.  相似文献   

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The evolution of the echinoderm larval skeleton was examined from the aspect of interactions between skeletogenic mesenchyme cells and surrounding epithelium. We focused on vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling, which was reported to be essential for skeletogenesis in sea urchin larvae. Here, we examined the expression patterns of vegf and vegfr in starfish and brittle stars. During starfish embryogenesis, no expression of either vegfr or vegf was detected, which contrast with previous reports on the expression of starfish homologs of sea urchin skeletogenic genes, including Ets, Tbr, and Dri. In later stages, when adult skeletogenesis commenced, vegfr and vegf expression were upregulated in skeletogenic cells and in the adjacent epidermis, respectively. These expression patterns suggest that heterochronic activation of VEGF signaling is one of the key molecular evolutionary steps in the evolution of the larval skeleton. The absence of vegf or vegfr expression during early embryogenesis in starfish suggests that the evolution of the larval skeleton requires distinct evolutionary changes, both in mesoderm cells (activation of vegfr expression) and in epidermal cells (activation of vegf expression). In brittle stars, which have well‐organized skeletons like the sea urchin, vegfr and vegf were expressed in the skeletogenic mesenchyme and the overlying epidermis, respectively, in the same manner as in sea urchins. Therefore, the distinct activation of vegfr and vegf may have occurred in two lineages, sea urchins and brittle stars.  相似文献   

16.
A monoclonal antibody, Sp12, binds to cortical granules, the hyaline layer, and skeletogenic, chromogenic, and blastocoelar mesenchyme of sea urchin eggs and embryos. Adult urchins also express Sp12 antigens in the dermal layer of the test and spines. Antigen is expressed on the surface of primary mesenchyme cells after they have entered the blastocoel, and by two secondary mesenchyme derivatives--the blastocoelar cells after they have been released from the tip of the archenteron, and the pigment cells in prism stage embryos. Immunogold localizations show antigen on the surfaces of mesenchyme, within membrane bounded vesicles, and associated with the Golgi apparatus. Western blots of antigens immunoprecipitated from seven developmental stages reveal twelve antigens ranging in Mr from 35 k to 240 k. Most of these antigens appear, disappear or change Mr over the first five days of development. Characterizations of this complex array of antigens show that the epitope recognized by Sp12 is eliminated by proteolytic enzymes and endoglycosidase F, while immunoreactivity is only reduced by periodate oxidation. As well, calcium magnesium free seawater extracts a subset of antigens different from that retained by crude membrane preparations. It is proposed that the mesenchyme of sea urchin embryos produces a family of developmentally regulated cell surface and extracellular matrix glycoproteins which all exhibit a carbohydrate epitope recognized by Sp12.  相似文献   

17.
Carbonic anhydrases (CAs) are a family of widely distributed metalloenzymes, involved in diverse physiological processes. These enzymes catalyse the reversible conversion of carbon dioxide to protons and bicarbonate. At least 19 genes encoding for CAs have been identified in the sea urchin genome, with one of these localized to the skeletogenic mesoderm (primary mesenchyme cells, PMCs). We investigated the effects of a specific inhibitor of CA, acetazolamide (AZ), on development of two sea urchin species with contrasting investment in skeleton production, Paracentrotus lividus and Heliocidaris tuberculata, to determine the role of CA on PMC differentiation, skeletogenesis and on non‐skeletogenic mesodermal (NSM) cells. Embryos were cultured in the presence of AZ from the blastula stage prior to skeleton formation and development to the larval stage was monitored. At the dose of 8 mmol/L AZ, 98% and 90% of P. lividus and H. tuberculata embryos lacked skeleton, respectively. Nevertheless, an almost normal PMC differentiation was indicated by the expression of msp130, a PMC‐specific marker. Strikingly, the AZ‐treated embryos also lacked the echinochrome pigment produced by the pigment cells, a subpopulation of NSM cells with immune activities within the larva. Conversely, all ectoderm and endoderm derivatives and other subpopulations of mesoderm developed normally. The inhibitory effects of AZ were completely reversed after removal of the inhibitor from the medium. Our data, together with new information concerning the involvement of CA on skeleton formation, provide evidence for the first time of a possible role of the CAs in larval immune pigment cells.  相似文献   

18.
Sea urchin embryo micromeres when isolated and cultured in vitro differentiate to produce spicules. Although several authors have used this model, almost nothing is known about the signaling pathways responsible for initiating skeletogenesis. In order to investigate the potential involvement of phosphorylation events in spiculogenesis, the effect of inhibitors of protein kinases and phosphatases on skeleton formation was studied. Results obtained using both cultured micromeres and embryos revealed that protein tyrosine kinase and phosphatase inhibitors blocked skeleton formation, but not serine/threonine phosphatase inhibitors. The inhibitors showed a dose-dependent effect and when removed from micromere or embryo culture, spicule formation resumed. Inhibition of tyrosine phosphatases resulted in an increase in the tyrosine phosphorylation level of two major proteins and a modest decrease in the expression of the mRNA coding for type I fibrillar collagen. These findings strongly suggest that tyrosine phosphorylation and dephosphorylation is required for micromere differentiation and for normal skeletogenesis during sea urchin embryo development.  相似文献   

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Fine structural studies of fractured developing sea urchin embryos revealed the existence of a voluminous, fibrillar, extracellular matrix composed of fine filaments, twisting fibers and granules lining the blastocoel of midgastrula embryos. Glycine disaggregated embryos also exhibited this material. The fibrillar matrix is closely associated with the basal lamina of the ectodermal cells of the embryo and histochemical studies suggest it is composed mostly of sulfated glycosaminoglycans. The position of the matrix within the blastocoel as well as its organized association with embryonic cell surfaces is consistent with the hypothesis that it plays a major role in guiding the invaginating archenteron during gastrulation.  相似文献   

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