首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
2.
Although there have been several studies on the structure of the ocellus photoreceptors in ascidian tadpole larvae using electron microscopy, the overall structure of these photoreceptor cells, especially the projection sites of the axons, has not been revealed completely. The number of photoreceptor cells is also controversial. Here, the whole structure of the ocellus photoreceptors in the larvae of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis was revealed by using an anti-arrestin (anti-Ci-Arr) antibody. The cell bodies of 30 photoreceptor cells covered the right side of the ocellus pigment cell and their outer segments extended through the pigment cell into the pigment cup. The axons of the photoreceptor cells were bundled together ventro-posteriorly in a single tract extending towards the midline. The nerve terminals diverged antero-posteriorly at the midline of the posterior sensory vesicle (SV). The Ci-arr gene was expressed throughout the SV at the embryonic mid-tailbud stage and it became restricted to the neighborhood of the ocellus pigment when ocellus pigmentation occurred. At the same time, the Ci-Arr protein was first detected, suggesting that the photoreceptor cells began to differentiate. The development of photoreceptor cells after hatching was also investigated using the anti-Ci-Arr antibody. Three hours after hatching, the photoreceptor terminals began to ramify and then expanded. Previous behavioral analysis showed that the larvae did not respond to the step-down of light until 2 h after hatching and then the photoresponse became robust. Accordingly, our results suggest that growth of the photoreceptor terminal is critical for the larvae to become photoresponsive.  相似文献   

3.
Although there have been several studies on the structure of the ocellus photoreceptors in ascidian tadpole larvae using electron microscopy, the overall structure of these photoreceptor cells, especially the projection sites of the axons, has not been revealed completely. The number of photoreceptor cells is also controversial. Here, the whole structure of the ocellus photoreceptors in the larvae of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis was revealed by using an anti‐arrestin (anti–Ci‐Arr) antibody. The cell bodies of 30 photoreceptor cells covered the right side of the ocellus pigment cell and their outer segments extended through the pigment cell into the pigment cup. The axons of the photoreceptor cells were bundled together ventro‐posteriorly in a single tract extending towards the midline. The nerve terminals diverged antero‐posteriorly at the midline of the posterior sensory vesicle (SV). The Ci‐arr gene was expressed throughout the SV at the embryonic mid‐tailbud stage and it became restricted to the neighborhood of the ocellus pigment when ocellus pigmentation occurred. At the same time, the Ci‐Arr protein was first detected, suggesting that the photoreceptor cells began to differentiate. The development of photoreceptor cells after hatching was also investigated using the anti–Ci‐Arr antibody. Three hours after hatching, the photoreceptor terminals began to ramify and then expanded. Previous behavioral analysis showed that the larvae did not respond to the step‐down of light until 2 h after hatching and then the photoresponse became robust. Accordingly, our results suggest that growth of the photoreceptor terminal is critical for the larvae to become photoresponsive. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2005  相似文献   

4.
The ascidian larva has a pigmented ocellus comprised of a cup-shaped array of approximately 30 photoreceptor cells, a pigment cell, and three lens cells. Morphological, physiological and molecular evidence has suggested evolutionary kinship between the ascidian larval photoreceptors and vertebrate retinal and/or pineal photoreceptors. Rx, an essential factor for vertebrate photoreceptor development, has also been suggested to be involved in the development of the ascidian photoreceptor cells, but a recent revision of the photoreceptor cell lineage raised a crucial discrepancy between the reported expression patterns of Rx and the cell lineage. Here, we report spatio-temporal expression patterns of Rx at single-cell resolution along with mitotic patterns up to the final division of the photoreceptor-lineage cells in Ciona. The expression of Rx commences in non-photoreceptor a-lineage cells on the right side of the anterior sensory vesicle at the early tailbud stage. At the mid tailbud stage, Rx begins to be expressed in the A-lineage photoreceptor cell progenitors located on the right side of the posterior sensory vesicle. Thus, Rx is specifically but not exclusively expressed in the photoreceptor-lineage cells in the ascidian embryo. Two cis-regulatory modules are shown to be important for the photoreceptor-lineage expression of Rx. The cell division patterns of the photoreceptor-lineage cells rationally explain the generation of the cup-shaped structure of the pigmented ocellus. The present findings demonstrate the complete cell lineage of the ocellus photoreceptor cells and provide a framework elucidating the molecular and cellular mechanisms of photoreceptor development in Ciona.  相似文献   

5.
Sorrentino M., Manni L., Lane N. J. and Burighel P. 2000. Evolution of cerebral vesicles and their sensory organs in an ascidian larva. —Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 81 : 243–258 The ascidian larval nervous system consists of the brain (comprising the visceral ganglion and the sensory vesicle), and, continuous with it, a caudal nerve cord. In most species two organs, a statocyst and an ocellus with ciliary photoreceptors, are contained in the sensory vesicle. A third presumptive sensory organ was sometimes found in an ‘auxiliary’ ganglionic vesicle. The development and morphology of the sensory and auxiliary ganglionic vesicles in Botryllus schlosseri and their associated organs was studied. The sensory vesicle contains a unique organ, the photolith, responding to both gravity and light. It consists of a unicellular statocyst, in the form of an expanded pigment cup receiving six photoreceptor cell extensions. Presumptive mechano‐receptor cells (S1 cells), send ciliary and microvillar protrusions to contact the pigment cup. A second group of distinctive cells (S2), slightly dorsal to the S1 cells, have characteristic microvillar extensions, resembling photoreceptor. We concur with the idea that the photolith is new and derived from a primitive statocyst and the S2 cells are the remnant of a primitive ocellus. In the ganglionic vesicle some cells contain modified cilia and microvillar extensions, which resemble the photoreceptor endings of the photolith. Our results are discussed in the light of two possible scenarios regarding the evolution of the nervous system of protochordates.  相似文献   

6.
Nodal signaling plays an essential role in the establishment of left–right asymmetry in various animals. However, it is largely unknown how Nodal signaling is involved in the establishment of the left–right asymmetric morphology. In this study, the role of Nodal signaling in the left–right asymmetric ocellus formation in the ascidian, Ciona intestinalis was dealt with. During the development of C. intestinalis, the ocellus pigment cell forms on the midline and moves to the right side of the midline. Then, the photoreceptor cells form on the right side of the sensory vesicle (SV). Ci-Nodal is expressed on the left side of the SV in the developing tail bud embryo. When Nodal signaling is inhibited, the ocellus pigment cell form but remain on the midline, and expression of marker genes of the ocellus photoreceptor cells is ectopically detected on the left side as well as on the right side of the SV in the larva. Furthermore, Ci-Rx, which is essential for the ocellus differentiation, turns out to be negatively regulated by the Nodal signaling on the left side of the SV, even though it is required for the right-sided photoreceptor formation. These results indicate that Nodal signaling controls the left–right asymmetric ocellus formation in the development of C. intestinalis.  相似文献   

7.
The processes of formation of two pigmented cells, the statocyte and the ocellar pigment cell, in the cerebral vesicle of larvae of the ascidian Styela plicata were investigated in whole mount specimens and serial paraffin sections by light microscopy. The pigmentations of the two cells became visible simultaneously in embryos at the stage of tail elongation, 5–6 hr after fertilization. The pigmented cells were at first located side by side in the dorsal wall of the neurocoel. Growth of the pigment mass in the ocellus ceased at about 6.5 hr, while that in the statocyte continued through the hatching period (9–10 hr) up to the swimming stage. The pigment mass in the statocyte consisted of two blocks which joined together during their growth. The statocyte migrated from the dorsal to the ventral wall of the cerebral vesicle by the swimming stage. In swimming larvae, the more ventral of the two pigment blocks of the statocyte formed an inverted pigment cup and a cluster of protuberances projected into it from the ventral wall of the cerebral vesicle. Phylogenetically, the sensory organs in the cerebral vesicle of Styela plicata seem intermediate between those in Pyuridae and Botryllinae with respect of their structure and process of differentiation.  相似文献   

8.
Neural crest-like cells (NCLC) that express the HNK-1 antigen and form body pigment cells were previously identified in diverse ascidian species. Here we investigate the embryonic origin, migratory activity, and neural crest related gene expression patterns of NCLC in the ascidian Ciona intestinalis. HNK-1 expression first appeared at about the time of larval hatching in dorsal cells of the posterior trunk. In swimming tadpoles, HNK-1 positive cells began to migrate, and after metamorphosis they were localized in the oral and atrial siphons, branchial gill slits, endostyle, and gut. Cleavage arrest experiments showed that NCLC are derived from the A7.6 cells, the precursors of trunk lateral cells (TLC), one of the three types of migratory mesenchymal cells in ascidian embryos. In cleavage arrested embryos, HNK-1 positive TLC were present on the lateral margins of the neural plate and later became localized adjacent to the posterior sensory vesicle, a staging zone for their migration after larval hatching. The Ciona orthologues of seven of sixteen genes that function in the vertebrate neural crest gene regulatory network are expressed in the A7.6/TLC lineage. The vertebrate counterparts of these genes function downstream of neural plate border specification in the regulatory network leading to neural crest development. The results suggest that NCLC and neural crest cells may be homologous cell types originating in the common ancestor of tunicates and vertebrates and support the possibility that a putative regulatory network governing NCLC development was co-opted to produce neural crest cells during vertebrate evolution.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Ascidians are protochordates related to vertebrate ancestors. The ascidian larval tail, with its notochord, dorsal nerve cord, and flanking rows of sarcomeric muscle cells, exhibits the basic chordate body plan. Molecular characterization of ascidian larval tail muscle may provide insight into molecular aspects of vertebrate skeletal muscle evolution. We report studies of the Ci-TnI gene of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis, which encodes the muscle contractile regulatory protein troponin I (TnI). Previous studies of a distantly related ascidian, Halocynthia roretzi, showed that different TnI genes were expressed in larval and adult muscles, the larval TnI isoforms having an unusual C-terminal truncation not seen in any vertebrate TnI. Here we show that, in contrast with Halocynthia, Ciona does not have a specialized larval TnI; the same TnI gene that is expressed in the heart and body-wall muscle of the sessile adult is also expressed in embryonic/larval tail muscle cells. Moreover the TnI isoform produced in embryonic/larval muscle is identical to that produced in adult body-wall muscle, i.e., a 182-residue protein with the characteristic chain length and overall structure of vertebrate skeletal muscle TnI isoforms. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that the unique features of Halocynthia larval TnI likely represent derived features, and hence that the vertebrate-skeletal-muscle -like TnI of Ciona is a closer reflection of the ancestral ascidian larval TnI. Our results indicate that characteristics of vertebrate skeletal muscle TnI emerged early in the evolution of chordate locomotory muscle, before the ascidian/vertebrate divergence. These features could be related to a basal chordate locomotory innovation-e.g., swimming by oscillation of an internal notochord skeleton-or they may be of even greater antiquity within the deuterostomes.  相似文献   

11.
12.
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   

13.
The ascidian tadpole larva has two brain sensory organs containing melanocytes: the otolith, a gravity receptor, and the ocellus, part of a photoreceptor. One or both of these sensory organs are absent in molgulid ascidians. We show here that developmental changes leading to the loss of sensory pigment cells occur by different mechanisms in closely related molgulid species. Sensory pigment cells are formed through a bilateral determination pathway in which two or more precursor cells are specified as an equivalence group on each side of the embryo. The precursor cells subsequently converge at the midline after neurulation and undergo cell interactions that decide the fates of the otolith and ocellus. Molgula occidentalis and M. oculata, which exhibit a tadpole larva with an otolith but lacking an ocellus, have conserved the bilateral pigment cell determination pathway. Programmed cell death (PCD) is superimposed on this pathway late in development to eliminate the ocellus precursor and supernumerary pigment cells, which do not differentiate into either an otolith or ocellus. In contrast to molgulids with tadpole larvae, no pigment cell precursors are specified on either side of the M. occulta embryo, which forms a tailless (anural) larva lacking both sensory organs, suggesting that the bilateral pigment cell determination pathway has been lost. The bilateral pigment cell determination pathway and superimposed PCD can be restored in hybrids obtained by fertilizing M. occulta eggs with M. oculata sperm, indicating control by a zygotic process. We conclude that PCD plays an important role in the evolution and development of brain sensory organs in molgulid ascidians.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
In the developingDrosophilaeye,BarH1andBarH2, paired homeobox genes expressed in R1/R6 outer photoreceptors and primary pigment cells, are essential for normal eye morphogenesis. Here, we show evidence thatBarH1ectopically expressed under the control of thesevenlessenhancer (sev-BarH1) causes two types of cone cell transformation: transformation of anterior/posterior cone cells into outer photoreceptors and transformation of equatorial/polar cone cells into primary pigment cells.sev-BarH1repressed the endogenous expression of theroughhomeobox gene in R3/R4 photoreceptors, while theBarH2homeobox gene was activated bysev-BarH1in an appreciable fraction of extra outer photoreceptors. In primary pigment cells generated by cone cell transformation, the expression ofcut,a homeobox gene specific to cone cells, was completely replaced with that ofBarhomeobox genes. Extra outer photoreceptor formation was suppressed and enhanced, respectively, by reducing the activity of Ras/MAPK signaling and by dosage reduction ofyan,a negative regulator of the pathway, suggesting interactions betweenBarhomeobox genes (cell fate determinants) and Ras/MAPK signaling in eye development.  相似文献   

16.
In many marine invertebrates with biphasic life cycles, juvenile/adult traits begin to develop before metamorphosis. For structures that are present at multiple developmental stages, but have distinct larval and adult forms, it is unclear whether larval and adult structures have shared or distinct developmental origins. In this study, we examine the relationship between the larval and adult eyes in the polychaete Capitella teleta. In addition, we describe a novel marker for larval and juvenile photoreceptor cells. Infrared laser deletion of individual micromeres in early embryos suggests that the same micromeres at the eight‐cell stage that are specified to generate the larval eyes also form the adult eyes. Direct deletion of the larval eye, including the pigment cell and the corresponding photoreceptor cell, resulted in a lack of shading pigment cells in juveniles and adults, demonstrating that this structure does not regenerate. However, a sensory photoreceptor cell was present in juveniles following direct larval eye deletions, indicating that larval and adult photoreceptors are separate cells. We propose that the formation of the adult eye in juveniles of C. teleta requires the presence of the pigment cell of the larval eye, but the adult photoreceptor is either recruited from adjacent neural tissue or arises de novo after metamorphosis. These results are different from the development and spatial orientation of larval and adult eyes found in other polychaetes, in which two scenarios have been proposed: larval eyes persist and function as adult eyes; or, distinct pigmented adult eyes begin developing separately from larval eyes prior to metamorphosis.  相似文献   

17.
Ascidians are invertebrate chordates with a larval body plan similar to that of vertebrates. The ascidian larval CNS is divided along the anteroposterior axis into sensory vesicle, neck, visceral ganglion and tail nerve cord. The anterior part of the sensory vesicle comes from the a-line animal blastomeres, whereas the remaining CNS is largely derived from the A-line vegetal blastomeres. We have analysed the role of the Ras/MEK/ERK signalling pathway in the formation of the larval CNS in the ascidian, Ciona intestinalis. We show evidence that this pathway is required, during the cleavage stages, for the acquisition of: (1) neural fates in otherwise epidermal cells (in a-line cells); and (2) the posterior identity of tail nerve cord precursors that otherwise adopt a more anterior neural character (in A-line cells). Altogether, the MEK signalling pathway appears to play evolutionary conserved roles in these processes in ascidians and vertebrates, suggesting that this may represent an ancestral chordate strategy.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号