Browsing by Subject "Xenopus"
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Publication Axes determination in the frog Xenopus laevis : the function of the goosecoid, myo1d and dmrt2(2020) Tingler, Melanie Bianca; Schweickert, AxelDuring early embryogenesis, pattern formation processes along the head-trunk (anteroposterior, AP), belly-back (dorsoventral, DV) and left-right (LR) body axis generate the fundamental body plan of the bilateria. The formation of the LR axis is exceptional because externally our body is bilateral symmetric whereas most inner organs are shaped and positioned asymmetrically. The three body axes are basically specified during gastrulation and neurulation by a set of developmental control genes. The aim of this work was to analyze the function of the highly conserved genes, goosecoid (gsc), myosin1d (myo1d) und dmrt2 during body axis determination in Xenopus. The first chapter of this work describes the activity of the homeobox transcription factor Goosecoid during AP- and DV-axis formation. Gsc acts as an autoregulatory transcriptional repressor and importantly is expressed in the Spemann Organizer (SO) of all vertebrate embryos. The SO represents the main dorsal signaling center for primary axis induction, regulates embryonic patterning and cell movements. It is further required for AP i.e. head and trunk development. Transferring of SO or gsc misexpression to ventral half of embryos resultes in secondary axis formation i.e. siamnese twins. However, SO function of Gsc was enigmatic, as gsc mutants showed no defects on early developmental processes what challenged Gsc function in the SO. In this chapter, gsc was characterized by conducting gain of function experiments in the embryonic midline of Xenopus embryos. Gsc was able to repress planar cell polarity (PCP) in a cell- and non-cell autonomous fashion leading to neural tube closure defects. In the early gastrulae, Gsc separates the head from the trunk mesoderm by repressing the mesodermal t-box gene transcription factor T (Tbxt). This inhibition allows the migration of the head mesodermal cells whereas the trunk notochord elongates by mediolateral intercalation. Gsc activity on PCP signaling seems to be specific for vertebrates only and correlates with the presence of two novel domains. The determination of the LR body axis is discussed in the second chapter of this work. At the so called left-right organizer (LRO) a cilia-mediated leftward-fluid flow initiates the symmetry breaking event in neurulae embryos. Lateral sensory cells (sLRO) of the LRO perceive flow on the left side and translate it into the left asymmetric induction of the highly conserved Nodal cascade. If and how the unconventional, actin-associated motor protein Myosin1d (Myo1d) as well as the transcription factor Doublesex and mab-3 related 2 (Dmrt2) intervene in LR specification was analyzed in this chapter. In evolutionary terms the study of myo1d was of high interest because in Drospohila, which lacks a ciliary flow mechanism, the homologous gene, myo31df, controls LR axis determination. Manipulations of myo1d in Xenopus demonstrated that in vertebrates Myo1d is involved in the cilia-based symmetry breakage event. By interacting with the PCP signaling pathway, Myo1d ensures leftward-fluid flow by regulating ciliary outgrowth and polarization. In Drosophila and Xenopus Myo1d interacts with PCP signaling and seems to link an ancestral symmetry breaking mechanism of the fly to the newly evolved leftward-fluid flow in vertebrates. Based on studies in zebrafish, which identified Dmrt2 as another factor involved in LR development and somitogenesis, we started the analysis of dmrt2 in Xenopus. Somitogenesis and laterality determination which on first sight are functionally distinct processes were analyzed in the context of dmrt2 function. In Xenopus, flow-sensing cells are affiliated to the somitic cell lineage and therefor paraxial mesoderm specification is crucial for setting up a functional LRO. Dmrt2 specifies the paraxial mesoderm and especially the sLRO by inducing the myogenic transcription factor myf5 in early gastrulae. This demonstrated for the first time experimentally how somitogenesis and laterality determination are intertwined and describes the genesis of the Xenopus sLRO cells in more detail.Publication Establishment of the body axes in Xenopus laevis through goosecoid, myosin 1d and bicaudal c(2021) Maerker, Markus Ferdinand; Schweickert, AxelThe bilaterian body plan consists of three body axes: the anteroposterior (AP; head-trunk/tail), the dorsoventral (DV; back-belly) and the left-right (LR; placement of inner organs) axis. Axis formation occurs during early embryogenesis and is critical for further development and viability of the embryo. In this comprehensive study three highly conserved determinants were functionally analyzed in the context of axis development. The first chapter of this work covers the autoregulatory, homeodomain containing, repressor gene goosecoid (gsc), whose most prominent expression marks the Spemann-(Mangold) organizer (SO). The SO is the primary dorsal signaling center and is instructive for tissue patterning along the DV and AP axes. Transplanting the SO or misexpressing gsc on the opposite ventral side of an embryo is sufficient to establish a new/secondary AP axis. However, its function during normal development in the SO remained enigmatic as the gsc loss of function (LOF) lead to no severe early developmental defects. To elucidate the function of gsc, timed gain of function (GOF) experiments were performed. Gsc efficiently repressed the planar cell polarity (PCP)/Wnt signaling pathway leading to severe gastrulation and neurulation defects. This novel Gsc function was correlated with two vertebrate specific domains, suggesting an evolutionary new function of Gsc with the emergence of jaws/neural crests in vertebrates. The second chapter of this study addresses the functions of Myosin1d (Myo1d) and Bicaudal c1 (Bicc1) during the LR axis determination in vertebrates. In this group LR symmetry breakage takes place at a ciliated epithelium called LR organizer (LRO). The initial cue for the asymmetric LR axis development is a cilia-driven leftward fluid flow. These cilia have to be correctly polarized through PCP/Wnt signaling. Interestingly, the invertebrate Drosophila melanogaster also displays a distinct LR axis but uses a cilia independent, yet not fully understood, mechanism. It depends on a myo1d homologous gene, myo31DF, and PCP. To unravel a potential common evolutionary origin of the bilaterian LR axis myo1d was analyzed during Xenopus laevis lateralization. Myo1d LOF experiments disturbed LR axis formation by compromising PCP dependent outgrowth and polarization of LRO cilia. These experiments link the PCP/Myosin based mechanism of flies to the newly evolved cilia/flow dependent mode of vertebrate LR axis determination suggesting actomyosin as common ancestral LR determinant. Contrary to Myo1d, Bicc1 was already described for its function during polarization of flow producing LRO cilia. However bicc1s expression is most prominent in the sensory LRO cells (sLRO). These cells detect the fluid flow and translate it into left-sided signaling of the morphogen Nodal1 and consequently asymmetric LR axis formation. These cells downregulate the expression of the secreted Nodal1 antagonist DAN domain family member 5 (dand5) in response to flow. Bicc1s function was re-evaluated with respect to its function in sLRO cells. Ex vivo and in vivo experiments involving GOF as well as LOF experiments showed that Bicc1 regulates both dand5 and nodal1 via a direct and indirect post-transcriptional mechanism, respectively. In the process of dand5 regulation several other LR determinants and regulatory events were linked with the Bicc1 dependent mechanism: Dicer1 dependent microRNA repression of dand5 and a proposed cation channel Polycystin 2 mediated Bicc1 modification. These results highlight the importance of a tightly controlled Dand5 protein level as decisive for the overall outcome of the LR symmetry breakage in vertebrates.Publication Funktionelle Analyse der Histondeacetylase 6 sowie experimentelle Modellierung von Lateralitätsdefekten während der Links-Rechts-Achsenentwicklung von Xenopus laevis und Paracentrotus lividus(2017) Tisler, Matthias; Blum, MartinVertebrates display an asymmetric positioning of the visceral organs, which is also denominated as left-right body axis. During embryogenesis, an asymmetric gene expression is detectable that is initiated by an evolutionary conserved mechanism of symmetry breakage, which is conserved among deuterostomes. During neurula stages, rotating motile mono-cilia at the so called left-right organizer (LRO) generate an asymmetric stimulus known as extracellular leftward fluid flow that is essential for the unilateral left asymmetric gene expression of the Nodal cascade. Spontaneous mutations or the experimentally induced loss of function of genes influencing ciliogenesis at the LRO, the induction of the Nodal cascade or its propagation lead to left-right defects. Left-right defects are frequently observed in human conjoined twins. Thoracopagous, dicephalic conjoined twins display defects in the arrangement of the inner organs, that are solely reported from the twin located to the right side. While left twins orient the inner organs wildtypically, right twins show a randomization of the left-right axis. The functional cause of the inverted arrangement regarding the right twin has remained enigmatic. It has been hypothesized that the observed laterality determination in conjoined twins, like in wildtype embryos, was dependent on leftward flow. In the course of this thesis, the known unilaterlal left-sided induction of the Nodal cascade in the left conjoined twin, as in singelton embryos, can be linked to leftward flow. The artificial induction of a second body axis leads to a subsequent duplication of the LRO during development. During flow stages endogenous and induced LROs locate in close proximity and display a partial fusion of cell populations. Anti-sense Morpholino Oligomeres or methylcelluose mediated loss of cilia motility lead to a loss of markergene expression in the left-lateral plate mesoderm of the left twin. By combining differential gain- and loss-of-function strategies, it was possible to link the establishment of laterality in conjoined twins to the leftward flow and, moreover, to manipulate it an a predictable manner. The cause of this hitherto enigmatic laterality defects in conjoined twins can therefore be explained by the evolutionary conserved mechanism of left-right establishment. Although the general mechanism of symmetry breakage has been characterized, novel candidate genes are continously beeing identified that act at a specific sequence of this process. The candidate gene histonedeacetylase 6 (hdac6) was shown to impact on left-right development. Anti-sense Morpholino Oligomere induced loss-of-function experiments led to left-right defects in a dose dependent manner regarding, the induction of the genes of the Nodal cascade, indicating a function of hdac6 before fluid flow induced regulation of dand5 mRNA. Taken together: histonedeacetylase 6 acts as modulator of canonical Wnt-signaling in the transcriptional induction of the Wnt-dependent transcription of foxj1, a master control gene of the biogenesis of motile cilia. Loss of Hdac6 leads to defects regarding the ciliogenesis of motile cilia at the LRO as well as the multiciliated epidermis of the embryo. The here presented results represent the first developmental hdac6 loss-of-function phenotype, which was so far not know from Hdac6-/- mice. These experiments shed a new light on the differential in vivo function of this unique histondeacetylase during development. Even though the asymmetric positioning of the inner organs is restricted to vertebrates, the asymmetric expression of the Nodal cascade turns out to be evolutionary conserved among deuterostomes. Comparable to vertebrate species, larvae of the sea urchin (Paracentrotus lividus, Echinodermata) display an asymmetric expression of the Nodal cascade in the ectoderm an during gastrula stages. Experiments from this work could demonstrate that also in sea urchin embryos the asymmetric gene expression depends on motile cilia. The archenteron of gastrula stage embryos was identified and described as homologous structure to vertebrate LROs. Deciliation experiments at different time points of development induce laterality defects and point towards a symmetry breakage during early gastrulation. By this experiments, the cilia dependent establishment of left-right asymmetry is described as a common synapomorphy of the deuterostomes beeing conserved from sea urchin to vertebrates, shedding a new light on the establishment of asymmetric gene expression.Publication Goosecoid und Calponin : zwei neue Regulatoren des PCP-Signalwegs(2012) Ulmer, Bärbel Maria; Blum, MartinVertebrate embryogenesis relies on morphogenetic movements such as cell migration and convergent extension (CE). The planar cell polarity (PCP) branch of non-canonical Wnt signaling governs the orientation of cells along embryonic axes. PCP-signaling leads to intracellular polarization of proteins such as Dishevelled, Prickle and Vangl2, resulting in activation of small GTPases such as Rho and Rac, and consequently oriented alignment of the cytoskeleton. This polarity is required for CE, namely for the intercalation of bipolar cells, during gastrulation and neurulation. CE promotes elongation of the notochord and the neural plate, which is a prerequisite of neural tube closure. Previous work had shown that misexpression of the transcription factor Goosecoid (Gsc) in the primitive streak of the mouse and in the dorsal marginal zone of the frog led to neural tube closure defects. The present work demonstrates that misexpression of Gsc inhibits CE in vivo and ex vivo. Gsc gain-of-function (Gsc-GOF) prevented the membrane localization of Dishevelled in the frog animal cap assay, suggesting a disturbance of the PCP pathway. The Gsc-induced phenotypes could be rescued by co-injection of core components of the PCP pathway, Vangl2 and Prickle. Overexpression of RhoA and the non-canonical Wnt11, rescued the effect of Gsc-GOF. Brachyury, a transcriptional activator of Wnt11 and known target of Gsc, was also able to rescue the effect of Gsc-GOF. Gsc thus acted as a repressor of PCP-mediated CE. Furthermore, loss of function experiments in Xenopus were conducted to reveal the endogenous function of Gsc. Due to the conserved and distinct expression of Gsc in Spemann's organizer and the induction of double axes upon injection of Gsc into the ventral marginal zone in Xenopus, a function of Gsc in the specification of dorsal tissue was predicted. The lack of gastrulation defects in the Gsc knock-out mouse, however, questioned an early role of Gsc. The repression of the PCP pathway by Gsc-GOF suggested a novel role of Gsc in the regulation of cell movements. Interestingly, Gsc is expressed in a distinct population of cells in the early organizer, which migrate out of the organizer during early gastrulation to form the prechordal mesoderm. In contrast, the subsequent involuting cells of the notochord undergo CE. Gsc knock-down in the frog reduced the prechordal plate resulting in a narrowing of eye distance. Furthermore, activin-induced CE in animal cap explants was enhanced by Gsc loss-of-function. These findings are consistent with a novel function of the organizer gene Gsc in the regulation of cell movements during early gastrulation, namely the repression of PCP-mediated CE as a prerequisite of active migration of the prechordal mesoderm. The directed migration of neural crest cells represents another embryological process which depends on PCP-signaling. Previous work showed expression of Calponin2 in neural crest cells. Moreover, inhibition of Calponin1 by the Rho-Kinase has been described. In Xenopus, Calponin2 localized to cell protrusion of delaminating and migrating neural crest cells. Loss of function of Calponin2 prevented the polarized outgrowth of cell extensions in neural crest explants and thus migration of neural crest cells. Moreover, additional stress fibers were formed in the central area of neural crest cells at the expense of the peripheral, cortical actin cytoskeleton. The PCP pathway directs migration via the activation of RhoA and inhibition of Rac in the cell compartment opposed to the leading edge. This suggested an interaction of PCP-signaling and Calponin2 during the migration of neural crest cells, which was examined by rescue experiments in vivo and in neural crest explants. Calponin2 knock-down rescued Wnt11 and Rho-Kinase loss-of-function, strongly suggesting that the actin-binding protein Calponin2 acts as an effector of the PCP pathway and directs the polarization of the actin cytoskeleton in migrating neural crest cells. In summary the present work involved two novel regulators of PCP-mediated CE, Gsc at the transcriptional level and Calponin2 as an effector of the actin cytoskeleton.Publication Intracellular regulation of Wnt and FGF signal transduction by the late endosomal compartment in Xenopus laevis(2022) Kreis, Jennifer; Feistel, KerstinThe endosomal network depicts a vast playground of multiple processing capabilities in terms of signaling. Distinct compartments of the endosomal machinery exert specific functions and thus contribute in signal termination, transduction, attenuation or amplification. Initially, these functions were attributed to early endosomes but recent research likewise considers late endosomes to be just as relevant in mediating such processes. Functionality as well as the molecular identity of these intracellular membranous platforms are orchestrated by a large superfamily of small Ras like GTPases. The collected data of this study particularly highlight the involvement of late endosomes and its associated regulator Rab7 in the early development of the African clawed frog Xenopus laevis. In particular, the first two chapters address the Rab7-dependent specification of the mesodermal germ layer by regulating intracellular pathway activity of Wnt and FGF/MAPK signaling. After fertilization formation of the germ layers is one of the first processes to be initiated. An essential part of mesoderm development comprises subdivision into different mesodermal regions, thus clustering it into ventrolateral and dorsal mesoderm. This patterning is crucial to promote further differentiation into various tissues arising from the mesodermal germ layer. It turned out, Rab7 regulates ventrolateral fates in a Wnt-dependent manner. The small GTPase exerts its function upstream of the Wnt co-transcription factor Ctnnb1 to ensure its nuclear relocalization. In addition to that, Rab7-positive endosomes are likewise required to mediate intracellular FGF/MAPK signal transduction in order to specify dorsal mesoderm. Here, Rab7 regulates proper signaling at the level or downstream of Ras and upstream of Erk/Mapk1. The last chapter then elicits further regulative properties of the late endosomal platform, concerning Cd63 function. The tetraspanin Cd63, which constitutes a transmembrane protein, associates with late endolysosomal compartments and exhibits a similar expression pattern like the small GTPase Rab7 in Xenopus laevis. Contrary to Rab7, function of Cd63 seems to be dispensable whilst gastrulation. However, the presented studies in this chapter suggest a vital function of the tetraspanin Cd63 during axial elongation and correct eye development. Therefore, these investigations regarding Cd63 demonstrated an involvement of the regulative function of late endosomes as signaling platforms for embryonic development beyond mesoderm specification and gastrulation. Overall, the summarized data of this study provides further insights into the determining capacity of Rab7-positive endosomal platforms in intracellular signal transduction of different pathways during early embryonic development.Publication Studies of human genetic diseases and developmental processes with the frog Xenopus laevis(2020) Ott, Tim; Blum, MartinNext generation sequencing is a driving force behind the identification of genes and alleles that are suspected to cause human genetic diseases. In silico tools are routinely used in the clinical everyday life to characterize unknown genotypes. However, these tools have a limited predictive accuracy and can only provide a first-line assessment. Especially un- or less studied genes require in every case predictive in vivo model systems that allow conclusions about disease associations. Classically, mice and zebrafish are utilized for such research, which concomitantly deepens the understanding of the involved developmental processes. In this collection of studies, the African clawed frog Xenopus laevis was used to explore and promote its suitability for the analysis of potential human disease genes, variants and their associated developmental processes. The first chapters covers potential candidate genes for primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD). The second chapter addresses if an actin based motor protein and a novel metzincin peptidase, encoded by myosin ID (MYO1D) and leishmanolysin like peptidase (LMLN2)/tout-de-travers (TDT), respectively, are potentially causative for PCD independent laterality defects. The third chapter deals with two candidates for neurodevelopmental disorders, namely hyaluronan mediated motility receptor (HMMR) and progesterone immunomodulatory binding factor 1 (PIBF1).Publication Towards a unifying model of symmetry breakage in Xenopus laevis : serotonin signaling and the cilia-driven leftward flow(2011) Thumberger, Thomas; Blum, MartinOrientation of the three vertebrate body axes anterior-posterior (AP), dorso-ventral (DV) and left-right (LR) is specified during early embryogenesis. Whereas the formation of the AP and DV axes is well understood, it is not finally resolved how and when the left and right sides get molecularly distinct. All deuterostomes analyzed so far, however, display an asymmetric left-sided expression of the TGF-β factor Nodal during embryonic development which precedes asymmetric organogenesis. In zebrafish, medaka, mouse and rabbit embryos a cilia-driven extracellular leftward fluid flow was shown to be causal for the left asymmetric induction of the Nodal gene cascade during early neurulation. In X. laevis, leftward flow was also shown to be driven by a mono-ciliated epithelium in the posterior part of the archenteron roof (gastrocoel roof plate, GRP). Mechanical blockage of this current resulted in laterality defects. Despite the apparent evolutionary conservation of flow, an earlier mechanism to specify the LR axis during early cleavage stages has been reported in X. laevis. Based on mostly inhibitor experiments, the so-called 'ion-flux' hypothesis was put forward which proposes an electrogenic transport and asymmetric accumulation of determinants as early as at the 32-64 cell stage. The monoamine serotonin is the core-effector of this hypothesis and was reported to asymmetrically accumulate at the ventral right blastomeres of early cleavage stage embryos. The aim of this study was to investigate putative interactions of the two apparently opposing mechanisms for breaking the initial LR symmetry of the Xenopus zygote. Reinvestigation of serotonin localization could not confirm the initial report. Further, serotonin signaling was shown to be necessary for LR axis formation on the dorsal but not ventral side, more specifically as a competence factor for the canonical Wnt-pathway. Detailed analyses of specimens impaired for serotonin signaling revealed requirement of serotonin signaling for specification of the superficial mesoderm (SM) which gives rise to the GRP and, consequently, to leftward flow. Leftward flow thus indirectly depends on dorsal serotonin signaling. In a further part of the present thesis, a re-examination of laterality in Siamese twins was performed. It has been known since the earliest experimental investigations of laterality that in induced and naturally occurring Siamese twins the left twin consistently displays wildtype orientation of the visceral organs whereas the orientation in the right twin is randomized. In experimentally induced conjoined twins, this observation holds true regardless of which twin is the induced. A model of symmetry breakage, in order to be plausible, thus should also be able to account for this phenomenon. When experimentally induced twins were analyzed for leftward flow, in the majority of cases a continuous leftward flow was observed, i.e. both twins shared one GRP. Thus, laterality cue(s) get translocated towards the far left side, i.e. only the left embryo receives the wildtype asymmetric information, regardless if it is the induced or endogenous twin. In rare case X. laevis conjoined axes developed far apart from one another such that two separate GRPs and individual leftward flows were observed, a condition that enabled both axes to exhibit a left-sided Nodal cascade. These experiments strongly suggest that Spemann's organizer itself is necessary and sufficient to establish all three body axes. In conclusion, the present analysis of laterality determination in the frog Xenopus supports evolutionary conservation of leftward flow as symmetry breaking event, as previously reported for mouse, rabbit and bony fish.