Genes establishing dorsoventral pattern formation in the zebrafish embryo: the ventral specifying genes

Development ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 123 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.C. Mullins ◽  
M. Hammerschmidt ◽  
D.A. Kane ◽  
J. Odenthal ◽  
M. Brand ◽  
...  

We identified 6 genes that are essential for specifying ventral regions of the early zebrafish embryo. Mutations in these genes cause an expansion of structures normally derived from dorsal-lateral regions of the blastula at the expense of ventrally derived structures. A series of phenotypes of varied strengths is observed with different alleles of these mutants. The weakest phenotype is a reduction in the ventral tail fin, observed as a dominant phenotype of swirl, piggytail, and somitabun and a recessive phenotype of mini fin, lost-a-fin and some piggytail alleles. With increasing phenotypic strength, the blood and pronephric anlagen are also reduced or absent, while the paraxial mesoderm and anterior neuroectoderm is progressively expanded. In the strong phenotypes, displayed hy homozygous embryos of snailhouse, swirl and somitabun, the somites circle around the embryo and the midbrain region is expanded laterally. Several mutations in this group of genes are semidominant as well as recessive indicating a strong dosage sensitivity of the processes involved. Mutations in the piggytail gene display an unusual dominance that depends on both a maternal and zygotic heterozygous genotype, while somitabun is a fully penetrant dominant maternal-effect mutation. The similar and overlapping phenotypes of mutants of the 6 genes identified suggest that they function in a common pathway, which begins in oogenesis, but also depends on factors provided after the onset of zygotic transcription, presumably during blastula stages. This pathway provides ventral positional information, counteracting the dorsalizing instructions of the organizer, which is localized in the dorsal shield.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tanguy Lucas ◽  
Huy Tran ◽  
Carmina Angelica Perez Romero ◽  
Aurélien Guillou ◽  
Cécile Fradin ◽  
...  

AbstractMorphogen gradients provide concentration-dependent positional information along polarity axes. Although the dynamics of establishment of these gradients is well described, precision and noise in the downstream activation processes remain elusive. A simple paradigm to address these questions is the Bicoid morphogen gradient that elicits a rapid step-like transcriptional response in young fruit fly embryos. Focusing on the expression of the main Bicoid target, hunchback (hb), at the onset of zygotic transcription, we used the MS2-MCP approach which combines fluorescent labeling of nascent mRNA with live imaging at high spatial and temporal resolution. Removing 36 putative Zelda binding sites unexpectedly present in the original MS2 reporter, we show that the 750 bp of the hb promoter are sufficient to recapitulate endogenous expression at the onset of zygotic transcription. After each mitosis, in the anterior, expression is turned on to rapidly reach a plateau with all nuclei expressing the reporter. Consistent with a Bicoid dose-dependent activation process, the time period required to reach the plateau increases with the distance to the anterior pole. Remarkably, despite the challenge imposed by frequent mitoses and high nuclei-to-nuclei variability in transcription kinetics, it only takes 3 minutes at each interphase for the MS2 reporter loci to measure subtle differences in Bicoid concentration and establish a steadily positioned and steep (Hill coefficient ~ 7) expression boundary. Modeling based on cooperativity between the 6 known Bicoid binding sites in the hb promoter region and assuming rate limiting concentrations of the Bicoid transcription factor at the boundary is able to capture the observed dynamics of pattern establishment but not the steepness of the boundary. This suggests that additional mechanisms are involved in the steepness of the response.


Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (6) ◽  
pp. 1649-1656 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.Y. Tiong ◽  
D. Nash ◽  
W. Bender

The wing imaginal disc is subdivided into a dorsal and a ventral compartments. A new dominant homeotic mutation, Dorsal wing1 (Dlw1), transforms ventral into dorsal compartment in heterozygotes. This phenotype is similar to one of the dominant phenotypes of Polycomb (Pc) mutants. In Pc Dlw+/Pc+ Dlw1 double mutants, the transformation is greatly enhanced. The recessive phenotype of Dlw1 is the opposite to the dominant phenotype. Dlw1/Dlw1 somatic clones induced at any larval stage differentiate only ventral pattern on both wing surfaces. This effect is one of the somatic clone phenotypes of trithorax (trx) lethals. A similar dorsal-to-ventral transformation is observed in Pc Dlw/Dlw clones. Dlw1/Dlw1 clones have no effect elsewhere, except in the dorsal notum, which may differentiate extra macrochaetes. We propose that: (1) Dlw+ is required for the specification of dorsal compartment; (2) some genes of the Polycomb group act as negative regulators of Dlw+, while some genes of the trithorax group act as positive regulators.


1998 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satoko Hojo ◽  
Jiro Fujita ◽  
Hiroshi Miyawaki ◽  
Yuka Obayashi ◽  
Jiro Takahara ◽  
...  

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