Countershading in zebrafish results from an Asip1 controlled dorsoventral gradient of pigment cell differentiation

Dorso-ventral (DV) countershading is a highly-conserved pigmentary adaptation in vertebrates. In mammals, spatially regulated expression of agouti-signaling protein (ASIP) generates the difference in shading by driving a switch between the production of chemically-distinct melanins in melanocytes in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2019-03, Vol.9 (1), p.3449-3449, Article 3449
Hauptverfasser: Cal, Laura, Suarez-Bregua, Paula, Comesaña, Pilar, Owen, Jennifer, Braasch, Ingo, Kelsh, Robert, Cerdá-Reverter, José Miguel, Rotllant, Josep
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dorso-ventral (DV) countershading is a highly-conserved pigmentary adaptation in vertebrates. In mammals, spatially regulated expression of agouti-signaling protein (ASIP) generates the difference in shading by driving a switch between the production of chemically-distinct melanins in melanocytes in dorsal and ventral regions. In contrast, fish countershading seemed to result from a patterned DV distribution of differently-coloured cell-types (chromatophores). Despite the cellular differences in the basis for counter-shading, previous observations suggested that Agouti signaling likely played a role in this patterning process in fish. To test the hypotheses that Agouti regulated counter-shading in fish, and that this depended upon spatial regulation of the numbers of each chromatophore type, we engineered asip1 homozygous knockout mutant zebrafish. We show that loss-of-function asip1 mutants lose DV countershading, and that this results from changed numbers of multiple pigment cell-types in the skin and on scales. Our findings identify asip1 as key in the establishment of DV countershading in fish, but show that the cellular mechanism for translating a conserved signaling gradient into a conserved pigmentary phenotype has been radically altered in the course of evolution.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-019-40251-z