Expression of ‘segmentation’ genes during larval and juvenile development in the polychaetes Capitella sp. I and H. elegans
Polychaete annelids and arthropods are both segmented protostome invertebrates. To investigate whether the segmented body plan of these two phyla share a common molecular ground pattern, we report the developmental expression of orthologues of the arthropod segment polarity genes engrailed ( en), he...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Developmental biology 2006, Vol.289 (1), p.179-194 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Polychaete annelids and arthropods are both segmented protostome invertebrates. To investigate whether the segmented body plan of these two phyla share a common molecular ground pattern, we report the developmental expression of orthologues of the arthropod segment polarity genes
engrailed (
en),
hedgehog (
hh), and
wingless (
wg/Wnt1) in larval and juvenile stages of the polychaete annelid
Capitella sp. I and
en in a second polychaete,
Hydroides elegans. Temporally, neither
Wnt1 nor
hh are detected in the segmented region of the larval body until after morphological segmentation is apparent. Expression of
CapI–Wnt1 is limited to a ring of ectoderm marking the future anus during larval segmentation.
CapI–hh is expressed in a ring of the hindgut internal to that of
CapI–Wnt1, as well as in a subset of ventral nerve cord neurons, anterior gut tissue, and mesoderm. In both
H. elegans and
Capitella sp. I,
en is expressed in a spatially and temporally dynamic manner in segmentally iterated structures as well as a population of cells that migrate internally from ectoderm to mesoderm, possibly representing a population of ecto–mesodermal precursors. Significantly, the expression patterns we report for
wg,
en, and
hh orthologues in
Capitella sp. I and for
en in larval development of
H. elegans are not comparable to the highly conserved ectodermal segment polarity pattern observed in arthropods at any life history stage, consistent with distinct origins of segmentation between annelids and arthropods. |
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ISSN: | 0012-1606 1095-564X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ydbio.2005.10.025 |