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1.
Although interstitial cells of hydra can migrate either apically or basally along the body column, there is a distinct bias toward apical cell accumulation. This apical bias could be produced by a local vectorial property of the tissue or it may be controlled by a more global property, such as a signal from the apical head region. The migration behavior of BrdU-labeled interstitial cells was examined in several types of grafts to distinguish between these two general types of migration control. Grafting BrdU-labeled midgastric region tissue into a host in either the normal or the reverse orientation had no effect on the apical bias, indicating that a local vectorial cue was probably not guiding cells apically. In grafts with heads or with feet at both ends of the body column, there was no directional bias in migration if the labeled tissue was equidistant from both ends. In the two-headed grafts, if the labeled tissue was closer to one end, there was a bias in the direction of the closer head. The results suggest that a graded signal emanating from the head creates the apical bias and may attract cells via chemotaxis. The apical bias is enhanced in decapitated animals regenerating a head, indicating that the attracting signal is present and is possibly stronger in regenerating heads. The signal for cell migration may be involved in a patterning process underlying head regeneration.  相似文献   

2.
Lateral grafting of small pieces of midregion tissue into different levels of the hydra body column was done to assess the influence of the host hypostome and basal disc (or, of the underlying morphogenetic gradients) in inducing secondary structures in the transplanted tissue; and also to identify the role, if any, of the induced secondary structures (or, perturbed morphogen gradients) on the pattern of the host. The same midpiece tissue differentiated to a basal disc when grafted near the host hypostome, and to a small hypostome with tentacles when grafted near the host basal disc. Chimeras with induced secondary basal discs showed a phenomenal increase in budding compared to the controls and to the chimeras having induced hypostomes. These results indicate a positive cross-reaction between both organizing regions during patterning in hydra.  相似文献   

3.
Hym-301 is a peptide that was discovered as part of a project aimed at isolating novel peptides from hydra. We have isolated and characterized the gene Hym-301, which encodes this peptide. In an adult, the gene is expressed in the ectoderm of the tentacle zone and hypostome, but not in the tentacles. It is also expressed in the developing head during bud formation and head regeneration. Treatment of regenerating heads with the peptide resulted in an increase in the number of tentacles formed, while treatment with Hym-301 dsRNA resulted in a reduction of tentacles formed as the head developed during bud formation or head regeneration. The expression patterns plus these manipulations indicate the gene has a role in tentacle formation. Furthermore, treatment of epithelial animals indicates the gene directly affects the epithelial cells that form the tentacles. Raising the head activation gradient, a morphogenetic gradient that controls axial patterning in hydra, throughout the body column results in extending the range of Hym-301 expression down the body column. This indicates the range of expression of the gene appears to be controlled by this gradient. Thus, Hym-301 is involved in axial patterning in hydra, and specifically in the regulation of the number of tentacles formed.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Summary The migratory properties of hydra cells within the tissue were studied. The extent and direction of cell migration were examined in budding, non-budding, and regenerating animals. Nematocytes and a small number of single big interstitial cells (the multipotent interstitial cells) actively migrate preferentially in an apical direction. Basal migration of these cells occurs only when a bud is present and, in which case, the cells migrate into the developing bud. The regeneration of the hypostome and tentacles does not affect cell migration in either direction, except for apical migration of stenotele nematocytes, which was markedly reduced.This research was supported by National Science Foundation Grant (GB 29284), National Institute of Health Grant (HD 08086-01), and N.I.H. Public Health Service Training Grant (HD 00347).  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
In Hydractinia, a colonial marine hydroid representing the basal phylum Cnidaria, Wnt signaling plays a major role in the specification of the primary body axis in embryogenesis and in the establishment of the oral pole during metamorphosis. Here we report supplementing investigations on head regeneration and bud formation in post-metamorphic development. Head and bud formation were accompanied by the expression of Wnt, frizzled and Tcf. Activation of Wnt signaling by blocking GSK-3beta affected regeneration, the patterning of growing polyps and the asexual formation of new polyps in the colony. In the presence of lithium ions or paullones, gastric segments excised from adult polyps showed reversal of tissue polarity as they frequently regenerated heads at both ends. Phorbol myristate acetate, a known activator of protein kinase C increased this effect. Global activation of the Wnt pathway caused growing polyps to form ectopic tentacles and additional heads along their body column. Repeated treatment of colonies evoked the emergence of many and dramatically oversized bud fields along the circumference of the colony. These giant fields fell apart into smaller sub-fields, which gave rise to arrays of multi-headed polyps. We interpret the morphogenetic effects of blocking GSK-3beta as reflecting increase in positional value in terms of positional information and activation of Wnt target genes in molecular terms.  相似文献   

9.
Summary In tissue regenerating the head, the ability to initiate head formation in a host increases with the time allowed for regeneration before grafting, while the foot-initiating ability decreases concomitantly. The reverse was found for tissue about to regenerate a foot. The early divergent changes thus indicated are counteracted in both head and foot regeneration by treatment with an inhibitor (Berking, 1977) in low concentrations.The inhibitor also interferes with processes which determine wether or not hypostome and tentacles are formed, and how many tentacles (if any) appear. The circumferential spacing of the tentacles was regular whether their number was normal or below normal.Secondary axes caused by implanted tissue either detach after having formed a head and a foot (i.e. behave like buds) or do not detach, having only formed a head. This alternative depends on the origin and amount of the implanted tissue and on the position of the implant within the host.The following model based on these findings is proposed: Head and foot formation start with pre-patterns which cause a continuously increasing change of the tissue's ability to initiate a head or a foot. Along the body axis this ability is determined by a graded distribution of sources. As development progresses, the high source density which accumulates in the head region causes the formation of a hypostome and tentacles; the angular spacing of tentacles is also dependent on source density. At a certain low source density foot-formation is initiated. The inhibitor counteracts the increase of source density in head-forming tissue as well as the decrease of source density in foot-forming tissue. It thus appears to be part of the mechanism which controls morphogenesis in hydra.  相似文献   

10.
The plasticity of nerve cells expressing the neuropeptide FMRFamide was examined in adult hydra. Using a whole-mount technique with indirect immunofluorescence, the spatial pattern of neurons showing FMRFamide-like immunoreactivity (FLI) was visualized. These neurons were located in the tentacles, hypostome, and peduncle, but not in the body column or basal disc. Since every neuron in the nerve net is continuously displaced toward an extremity and eventually sloughed, the constant pattern of FLI+ neurons could arise in one of two ways. When displaced into the appropriate region, FLI- neurons are converted to FLI+ neurons, or FLI+ neurons arise by differentiation from interstitial cells. To distinguish between these two possibilities, interstitial cells, the multipotent precursors of the nerve cells, were eliminated by treatment with hydroxyurea or nitrogen mustard. Following head, or foot and peduncle, removal from these animals, the missing structures regenerated. The spatial pattern of FLI+ neurons reappeared in the newly regenerated head or peduncle. This shows FLI- neurons in the body column were converted to FLI+ when their position was changed to the head or the peduncle. When the peduncle was grafted into the body column, it was converted to basal disc or body column tissue, and FLI disappeared. The appearance and loss of FLI was always position dependent. These results indicate that the neurons in the mature nerve net can change their neuropeptide phenotype in response to changes in their position.  相似文献   

11.
Head formation was investigated during regeneration of dissociated and aggregated cells of Hydra magnipapillata. The surface area measured at the hollowing stage was found to be a useful quantity for characterizing the size of an aggregate. Four kinds of aggregates were examined, using tissue originating from (1) whole animals, (2) apical halves, (3) decapitated animals, and (4) decapitated animals allowed to regenerate for several hours before dissociation. For aggregate types (1), (2), and (4), not all the tentacles observed at an intermediate stage of the regeneration process were localized around hypostomes: the number of such body tentacles at the intermediate stage was comparable to that of the hypostomal tentacles and was approximately proportional to the surface area. These results and others suggest that the formation of body tentacles takes place independently of hypostome formation. However, for aggregate type (3), most of the tentacles appearing at the intermediate stage were hypostomal. The correlation between the surface area and the number of tentacles at the steady state apparently resulted from a regulation process by which body tentacles decreased and hypostomal tentacles increased. It is considered that the number of body tentacles appearing at an intermediate stage of regeneration would depend on the initial level of head-activation potential and that body tentacles are formed by the local fluctuation of head-activation potential.  相似文献   

12.
In the column of hydra, tissues continually move away from a region located just underthe whorl of tentacles. Above this subtentacular region, tissues proceed into the hypostome and tentacles; below it tissues pass into the buds or continue down the stalk. These movements represent a steady state pattern of tissue renewal in which column growth is balanced by tissue loss at the body extremities. But the existence of a subtentacular zone in which tissue appears stationary does not necessarily indicate that growth is restrictedto this region, as is commonly stated. The body column of hydra can be viewed as an expanding cylinder whose elongation is balanced by tissue loss at the two ends. In such a body there must be one region from whichtissue appears to emanate, regardless of how growth is distributed along the cylinder. Only the rates at which tissues move will be characteristic of the underlying growthpattern. In Hydra littoralis, the measured rates of tissue movement down the gastric column are consistent with the distributions of mitotic figures, which indicate that growth is spread out along the column.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
Hydras were cut in the middle of the gastral part of the body. The part with the hypostome is marked as H, and the one with the foot as P. Both parts were treated with actinomycine D in 0,5 mg : 200 ml water solution. H-parts are much more sensitive to the effect of actinomycine than P-parts, and P lives considerably longer. It is supposed that such reaction are the result of specificity of H and P cell composition, and of the growth direction which is characteristic of hydra in general. H-part has a proportionally greater number of differentiated cells and this relatively smaller number of non-differentiated cells is spent in it quicker than in P-part in which they are more numerous. The growth direction has a decisive influence on further life of H- respectively P-part. Namely, H- in growth direction does not have any damaged body regions (hypostome and tentacles are intact) and it lacks the amputated P-part i.e. gastral region with foot: the region which is on the opposite side of growth direction of hydra. H-part has all the characteristic cells of this body region, so after amputation mostly it does not change. Unfavourable effect of citostatic manifests sooner and H-part desintegrates quicker. On the contrary, P-part lacks the hypostome with tentacles, and these are the body parts in the growth direction. Zimogen cells can dedifferentiate and differentiate. The hypostome and tentacles regenerate as far as is allowed by actinomycine.  相似文献   

16.
The relationship between populations of nerve cells defined by two monoclonal antibodies was investigated in Hydra oligactis. A population of sensory nerve cells localized in the head (hypostome and tentacles) is identified by the binding of antibody JD1. A second antibody, RC9, binds ganglion cells throughout the animal. When the nerve cell precursors, the interstitial cells, are depleted by treatment with hydroxyurea or nitrogen mustard, the JD1+ nerve cells are lost as epithelial tissue is sloughed at the extremities. In contrast, RC9+ nerve cells remain present in all regions of the animal following treatment with either drug. When such hydra are decapitated to initiate head regeneration, the new head tissue formed is again free of JD1+ sensory cells but does contain RC9+ ganglion cells. Our studies indicate that (1) nerve cells are passively displaced with the epithelial tissue in hydra, (2) JD1+ sensory cells do not arise by the conversion of body column nerve cells that are displaced into the head, whereas RC9+ head nerve cells can originate in the body column, (3) formation of new JD1+ sensory cells requires interstitial cell differentiation. We conclude from these results that the two populations defined by these antibodies are incorporated into the h ad via different developmental pathways and, therefore, constitute distinct nerve cell lineages.  相似文献   

17.
SYNOPSIS. Pieces of hydra tissue of various sizes and shapeswere cut from the body columns of adult hydra and allowed toregenerate. The proportions of the resulting animals were determinedfirst by counting cells in the head and body, and secondly bymeasuring the structures directly using an ocular micrometer. Head-body proportions were found to be constant over a tenfoldsize range. Very small regenerates had a larger head fractionand large budding regenerates had a smaller head fraction. Extrastructures developed in certain shape pieces, but total head-bodytissue remained proportional. More detailed measurement of thehead showed that the hypostome regulated only slightly withtotal size change, while the tentacle tissue varied considerablyto maintain the head-body ratio. This suggested that the patterningof the hypostome and the tentacles might involve separate processes,with the latter being responsible for proportion regulation.While the body mass appeared to be determined by the proportioningmechanism, its circumference was related to the circumferenceof the hypostome, suggesting a causal relationship between thetwo organizers and the column shaping. The basal disc remainedproportional to the body except in the smallest pieces. A Gierer-Meinhardtpattern formation scheme could account for the results found.  相似文献   

18.
The nervous system of Hydra, a freshwater cnidaria, occurs as dispersed, or diffuse, nerve net throughout the animal. It is widely accepted that in a diffuse nervous system an external stimulus is conducted in all directions over the net. Here I report observations that hydra tentacles respond to feeding and wounding stimuli in a unidirectional manner. Upon contact of a tentacle with a brine shrimp larva during feeding, tissue on the proximal side of the point of contact contracted strongly, whereas tissue on the distal side contracted only very weakly. Feeding a tentacle to which a second tentacle was grafted to the proximal end in the reversed orientation showed that unidirectional conduction, once initiated, was blocked by the reversal of polarity, demonstrating that the distal to proximal polarity of tissue is crucial for unidirectional conduction. Unidirectional conduction was obtained also by mechanically pinching the tissue. The response of tentacles devoid of neurons examined was bidirectional, demonstrating that the nervous system is responsible for the unidirectional responses. These observations suggest that polarized property of the nerve net in hydra tentacles is responsible for the unidirectional tentacle contraction.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Summary One group of animals has been cut close behind the tentacles and another group in the central part of the gastral region.Hydras have been fixed in Bouin in various time intervals after amputation (from 30 min to 46 h).When the hypostome is entirely closed and when both layers are conspicuous, then the hypostome looks very much like a top of the bud in development. These similarites refer to the position of the cells and their qualitative and quantitative composition.The results lead to a conclusion that zymogen cells can easily move and that in different forms of differentiation can be found in a few hours either at the place of the formation of buds or at the place of the regeneration of the hypostome.Their dedifferentiation into interstitial gastrodermal cells permitted the migration of these cells into the layer of the ectoderm and in this way the growth of the bud and the regeneration of the hypostome are made possible.The vacuolization of these cells and their change into mucous cells created the condition for the formation of new parts of the gastrodermal hypostome and for the formation of tentacles.
Zusammenfassung Eine Gruppe Versuchstiere wurde nahe hinter den Tentakeln und die andere Gruppe im zentralen Teil der Gastralregion durchschnitten. Die Hydren wurden in Bouin zu verschiedenen Zeitintervallen nach Amputation fixiert (zwischen 30 min und 46 Std). Wenn das Hypostom gänzlich geschlossen ist und beide Zell-Lagen augenfällig sind, dann sieht das Hypostom der Oberseite einer Knospe sehr ähnlich. Diese Ähnlichkeiten beziehen sich auf die Lage der Zellen und auf ihre qualitative und quantitative Zusammensetzung. Die Ergebnisse erlauben den Schluß, daß Zymogenzellen mit Leichtigkeit sich bewegen und innerhalb weniger Stunden als verschieden differenzierte Formen entweder an der Bildungsstelle von Knospen oder am Regenerationsort des Hypostoms gefunden werden können. Ihre Dedifferenzierung in interstitiale Gastroderm-Zellen erlaubt die Wanderung dieser Zellen in die Ectoderm-Schicht und auf diese Weise das Wachstum der Knospe und die Regeneration des Hypostoms. Die Vakuolisierung dieser Zellen und ihre Umwandlung in Schleimzellen schafft die Bedingungen für die Bildung neuer Teile des gastrodermalen Hypostoms und der Tentakeln.


The work has been partly effected in Middlesex Hospital Medical School, London, where I practised as the British Council scholar.  相似文献   

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