Disruption of gastrulation and oral-aboral ectoderm differentiation in the Lytechinus pictus embryo by a dominant/negative PDGF receptor

Little is known about the cell signaling involved in forming the body plan of the sea urchin embryo. Previous work suggested that PDGF-like and EGF-like receptor-mediated signaling pathways are involved in gastrulation and spiculogenesis in the Lytechinus pictus embryo. Here we show that expression...

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Veröffentlicht in:Development (Cambridge) 1997-06, Vol.124 (12), p.2355-2364
Hauptverfasser: Ramachandran, R K, Wikramanayake, A H, Uzman, J A, Govindarajan, V, Tomlinson, C R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Little is known about the cell signaling involved in forming the body plan of the sea urchin embryo. Previous work suggested that PDGF-like and EGF-like receptor-mediated signaling pathways are involved in gastrulation and spiculogenesis in the Lytechinus pictus embryo. Here we show that expression of the human PDGF receptor-beta lacking the cytoplasmic domain disrupted development in a manner consistent with a dominant/negative mechanism. The truncated PDGF receptor-beta inhibited gut and spicule formation and differentiation along the oral-aboral axis. The most severely affected embryos arrested at a developmental stage resembling mesenchyme blastula. Coinjection into eggs of RNA encoding the entire human PDGF receptor-beta rescued development. The truncated PDGF receptor-beta caused the aboral ectoderm-specific genes LpS1 and LpC2 to be repressed while an oral ectoderm-specific gene, Ecto-V, was expressed in all ectoderm cells. The results support the hypothesis that a PDGF-like signaling pathway plays a key role in the intercellular communication required for gastrulation and spiculogenesis, and in cell commitment and differentiation along the oral-aboral axis.
ISSN:0950-1991
1477-9129
DOI:10.1242/dev.124.12.2355