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The sea urchin embryo is a classical model system for studying the role of the cytoskeleton in such events as fertilization, mitosis, cleavage, cell migration and gastrulation. We have conducted an analysis of gene models derived from the Strongylocentrotus purpuratus genome assembly and have gathered strong evidence for the existence of multiple gene families encoding cytoskeletal proteins and their regulators in sea urchin. While many cytoskeletal genes have been cloned from sea urchin with sequences already existing in public databases, genome analysis reveals a significantly higher degree of diversity within certain gene families. Furthermore, genes are described corresponding to homologs of cytoskeletal proteins not previously documented in sea urchins. To illustrate the varying degree of sequence diversity that exists within cytoskeletal gene families, we conducted an analysis of genes encoding actins, specific actin-binding proteins, myosins, tubulins, kinesins, dyneins, specific microtubule-associated proteins, and intermediate filaments. We conducted ontological analysis of select genes to better understand the relatedness of urchin cytoskeletal genes to those of other deuterostomes. We analyzed developmental expression (EST) data to confirm the existence of select gene models and to understand their differential expression during various stages of early development.  相似文献   

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Early sea urchin development requires a dynamic reorganization of both the actin cytoskeleton and cytoskeletal interactions with cellular membranes. These events may involve the activities of multiple members of the superfamily of myosin motor proteins. Using RT-PCR with degenerate myosin primers, we identified 11 myosin mRNAs expressed in unfertilized eggs and coelomocytes of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. Seven of these sea urchin myosins belonged to myosin classes Igamma, II, V, VI, VII, IX, and amoeboid-type I, and the remaining four may be from novel classes. Sea urchin myosins-V, -VI, -VII, and amoeboid-type-I were either completely or partially cloned and their molecular structures characterized. Sea urchin myosins-V, -VI, -VII, and amoeboid-type-I shared a high degree of sequence identity with their respective family members from vertebrates and they retained their class-specific structure and domain organization. Analysis of expression of myosin-V, -VI, -VII, and amoeboid-type-I mRNAs during development revealed that each myosin mRNA displayed a distinct temporal pattern of expression, suggesting that myosins might be involved in specific events of early embryogenesis. Interestingly, the onset of gastrulation appeared to be a pivotal point in modulation of myosin mRNA expression. The presence of multiple myosin mRNAs in eggs and embryos provides insight into the potential involvement of multiple specific motor proteins in the actin-dependent events of embryo development.  相似文献   

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Mature unfertilized eggs of the sea urchin Lytechinus pictus contain multiple alpha-tubulin mRNAs, which range in size from 1.75 to 4.8 kb, and two beta-tubulin mRNAs, 1.8 and 2.25 kb. These mRNAs were found at similar levels throughout the early cleavage stages. RNA gel blot hybridizations showed that prominent quantitative and qualitative changes in tubulin mRNAs occurred between the early blastula and hatched blastula stages. The overall amounts of alpha- and beta-tubulin mRNAs increased two- to fivefold between blastula and pluteus. These increases were due mainly to a rise in a 1.75-kb alpha RNA and a new 2.0-kb beta RNA. Other, minor changes also occurred during subsequent development. All size classes of alpha- and beta-tubulin RNAs in early and late embryos contained poly(A)+ translatable sequences. As reported earlier, some of each of the alpha RNAs, but neither of the beta RNAs, are translated in the egg and a small portion of each of the stored alpha and beta RNAs is recruited onto polysomes within 30 min of fertilization. In the work described here, subsequent development up to the morula stage was accompanied by a gradual recruitment of tubulin mRNAs into polysomes. By the early blastula stage, most of the maternal tubulin sequences were associated with polysomes. In contrast to the gradual recruitment of maternal sequences throughout cleavage, the tubulin mRNAs which appeared at the blastula stage showed no delay in entering polysomes. The exact fraction of each mRNA that was translationally active at later stages varied somewhat among the individual mRNAs. From the differential hybridization patterns of egg, embryo, and testis RNAs to various tubulin cDNA and genomic DNA probes, it is concluded that at least one gene producing maternal alpha mRNA is different from a second one which is expressed only in testis. Each of the three embryonic beta RNAs is encoded by a different beta gene; at least two of these different beta genes are also expressed in testis.  相似文献   

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The sea urchin provides a relatively simple and tractable system for analyzing the early stages of embryo development. Here, we use the sea urchin species, Paracentrotus lividus, to investigate the role of Alix in key stages of embryogenesis, namely the egg fertilization and the first cleavage division. Alix is a multifunctional protein involved in different cellular processes including endocytic membrane trafficking, filamentous (F)‐actin remodeling, and cytokinesis. Alix homologues have been identified in different metazoans; in these organisms, Alix is involved in oogenesis and in determination/differentiation events during embryo development. Herein, we describe the identification of the sea urchin homologue of Alix, PlAlix. The deduced amino acid sequence shows that Alix is highly conserved in sea urchins. Accordingly, we detect the PlAlix protein cross‐reacting with monoclonal Alix antibodies in extracts from P. lividus, at different developmental stages. Focusing on the role of PlAlix during early embryogenesis we found that PlAlix is a maternal protein that is expressed at increasingly higher levels from fertilization to the 2‐cell stage embryo. In sea urchin eggs, PlAlix localizes throughout the cytoplasm with a punctuated pattern and, soon after fertilization, accumulates in larger puncta in the cytosol, and in microvilli‐like protrusions. Together our data show that PlAlix is structurally conserved from sea urchin to mammals and may open new lines of inquiry into the role of Alix during the early stages of embryo development.  相似文献   

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Embryonic differentiation is believed to be due to a programmed expression of genes, which includes their time of activation, sequence of appearance, and amount transcribed into the immediate gene product, RNA. Differential synthesis of the major RNA classes, such as the ribosomal RNAs (28S, 18S, 5S) and transfer RNA (tRNA), characterizes many animal developing systems, including the sea urchin embryological system. Previous work has shown that the genes for 5S RNA and tRNA are active during early cleavage in sea urchin embryos. The present study focused on quantitatively measuring and comparing the rate of 5S RNA and tRNA synthesis in cleavage, early blastula, and early pluteus embryos of Arbacia punctulata. At each stage, embryos were labeled for 3 h with [8-3H]-guanosine. Total cellular RNA was extracted using the cold (4°C)-phenol-sodium dodecyl sulfate method and purified (LiCl-soluble) RNA preparations were fractionated by electrophoresis on 10% polyacrylamide gels. The amount of 5S RNA and tRNA synthesized at each stage was calculated from the radioactivity coincident with the 5S RNA and with the tRNA absorbance peaks (A260 nm) on each gel, from the known guanosine monophosphate (GMP) compositions of sea urchin 5S RNA and tRNA and from the average specific radioactivity of the GTP precursor pool during each 3 h labeling period. The results showed that on a per embryo basis the rates of 5S RNA and tRNA synthesis increased slightly (about 1.4-fold) from cleavage through pluteus stages, while on a per cell basis the rates declined severalfold (about 3-fold) during embryogenesis. The rates of 5S RNA and tRNA synthesis determined here parallel previously-reported levels of RNA polymerase III in sea urchin embryos, suggesting that cellular levels of RNA polymerase III may exert some positive control over 5S RNA and tRNA synthesis during sea urchin embryogenesis.  相似文献   

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The sequence complexity of sea urchin embryo micromere RNA is about 75% of that of total 16-cell embryo cytoplasmic RNA, as reported earlier by Rodgers and Gross [Rodgers, W. H., and Gross, P. R. (1978) Cell, 14, 279–288]. In contrast to the rest of the embryo, there are few, if any, complex maternal RNA species in the micromere cytoplasm which are not represented in the polysomes. The micromeres do not contain detectable quantities of high-complexity nuclear RNA, though such RNA exists in other cells of the fourth-cleavage embryo.  相似文献   

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