TY - JOUR
T1 - Redundant mechanisms are involved in suppression of default cell fates during embryonic mesenchyme and notochord induction in ascidians
AU - Kodama, Hitoshi
AU - Miyata, Yoshimasa
AU - Kuwajima, Mami
AU - Izuchi, Ryoichi
AU - Kobayashi, Ayumi
AU - Gyoja, Fuki
AU - Onuma, Takeshi A.
AU - Kumano, Gaku
AU - Nishida, Hiroki
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the members of the Asamushi Research Center for Marine Biology and the Otsuchi International Coastal Research Center for help in collecting live ascidian adults, and the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory for help in maintaining them. Thanks are also extended to Dr. N. Takatori of Tokyo Metropolitan University for sharing the sequence of zygotic Lhx3 cDNA before publication ( Kobayashi et al., 2010 ). This work was supported by Grants in Aid from The Japan Society for The Promotion of Science ( 22370078, 15H04377 ) and The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan ( 23112714, 25113518 ) to H.N.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2016/8/1
Y1 - 2016/8/1
N2 - During embryonic induction, the responding cells invoke an induced developmental program, whereas in the absence of an inducing signal, they assume a default uninduced cell fate. Suppression of the default fate during the inductive event is crucial for choice of the binary cell fate. In contrast to the mechanisms that promote an induced cell fate, those that suppress the default fate have been overlooked. Upon induction, intracellular signal transduction results in activation of genes encoding key transcription factors for induced tissue differentiation. It is elusive whether an induced key transcription factor has dual functions involving suppression of the default fates and promotion of the induced fate, or whether suppression of the default fate is independently regulated by other factors that are also downstream of the signaling cascade. We show that during ascidian embryonic induction, default fates were suppressed by multifold redundant mechanisms. The key transcription factor, Twist-related.a, which is required for mesenchyme differentiation, and another independent transcription factor, Lhx3, which is dispensable for mesenchyme differentiation, sequentially and redundantly suppress the default muscle fate in induced mesenchyme cells. Similarly in notochord induction, Brachyury, which is required for notochord differentiation, and other factors, Lhx3 and Mnx, are likely to suppress the default nerve cord fate redundantly. Lhx3 commonly suppresses the default fates in two kinds of induction. Mis-activation of the autonomously executed default program in induced cells is detrimental to choice of the binary cell fate. Multifold redundant mechanisms would be required for suppression of the default fate to be secure.
AB - During embryonic induction, the responding cells invoke an induced developmental program, whereas in the absence of an inducing signal, they assume a default uninduced cell fate. Suppression of the default fate during the inductive event is crucial for choice of the binary cell fate. In contrast to the mechanisms that promote an induced cell fate, those that suppress the default fate have been overlooked. Upon induction, intracellular signal transduction results in activation of genes encoding key transcription factors for induced tissue differentiation. It is elusive whether an induced key transcription factor has dual functions involving suppression of the default fates and promotion of the induced fate, or whether suppression of the default fate is independently regulated by other factors that are also downstream of the signaling cascade. We show that during ascidian embryonic induction, default fates were suppressed by multifold redundant mechanisms. The key transcription factor, Twist-related.a, which is required for mesenchyme differentiation, and another independent transcription factor, Lhx3, which is dispensable for mesenchyme differentiation, sequentially and redundantly suppress the default muscle fate in induced mesenchyme cells. Similarly in notochord induction, Brachyury, which is required for notochord differentiation, and other factors, Lhx3 and Mnx, are likely to suppress the default nerve cord fate redundantly. Lhx3 commonly suppresses the default fates in two kinds of induction. Mis-activation of the autonomously executed default program in induced cells is detrimental to choice of the binary cell fate. Multifold redundant mechanisms would be required for suppression of the default fate to be secure.
KW - Ascidian
KW - Default cell fate
KW - Embryonic induction
KW - FGF
KW - Lhx3
KW - Mesenchyme
KW - Notochord
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.05.033
DO - 10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.05.033
M3 - Article
C2 - 27265866
AN - SCOPUS:84989882476
SN - 0012-1606
VL - 416
SP - 162
EP - 172
JO - Developmental Biology
JF - Developmental Biology
IS - 1
ER -