Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
2016.10.11. Ernst Haeckel (1834-1919) Karl Ernst von Baer (1792-1876) GASTRULATION – formation of germ layers I. „It is not birth, marriage, or geath, but gastrulation, which is truly the most important time in yor life” Lewis Wolpert (1983) 2 Definitions Types of morphogenetical transformations background: apical constriction, planar polarity Details with background C. elegans Drosophila Zebrafish Xenopus Amniote 1 2016.10.11. DEFINITIONS 3 GASTRULATION is a fundamental phase of animal embryogenesis during which the germ layers of an embryo are specified, formed and the body plan of the mature organism is established Complex and coordinated movements on a massive scale allow cells to establish great complexity from a very simple starting form. A GERM LAYER is a group of cells in an embryo that interact with each other as the embryo develops and contribute to the formation of all organs and tissues germ layers are epithelial like cell layers without specialized cellular junctions and polarity Diploblastic organisms have only the two primary germ layers Triploblastic animals have three germ layers Gastrulation must be exquisitely regulated to ensure that specific cells move to the correct position at the appropriate developmental time MORPHOLOGICAL TISSUE TRANSFORMATION Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 2012.28:687-717 4 GASTRULATION = 4 evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements Internalization/ emboly: mesodermal and endodermal cells become internalized beneath the outer layer; Epiboly: epibolic movements spread and thin germ layers; Convergence movements narrow germ layers dorsoventrally; Extension movements elongate germ layers antero-posteriorly cell shape changes, • directed migration, • planar and radial intercalations, • cell divisions, • EMT (epithelial-mesenchymal transition), Cell behaviours ← actomyosin cytoskeleton • guided by • differential cell adhesion, • chemotaxis, chemokinesis • planar polarity. Coordination of gastrulation movements with embryonic polarity involves regulation by anteroposterior and dorsoventral patterning systems Chemotaxis: directional cell movement of cells towards concentration gradients of solubilized attractants Chemokinesis: increased nondirectional activity of cells due to presence of a chemical substance (random cell movement) 2 2016.10.11. Internalization / emboly 5 Gateway = blastopore Epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) ← cell adhesion molecules are downregulated, while intermediate filament network is formed and microtubule network is rearranged 0. INICIATION: APICAL CONSTRICTION („csúcsi összehúzódás”) actomyosin mediated contraction ← apical enrichment of activated (phosphorylated) nonmuscle myosin II Functions and examples of apical constriction. (A-C) Apical constriction functions in various contexts including: (A) tissue folding and tube formation, seen in examples of gastrulation and vertebrate neurulation; (B) ingression of individual cells and epithelial-tomesenchymal (EMT) transitions, as occur in other examples of gastrulation and in tissue homeostasis; and (C) healing and sealing of embryonic tissues in response to wound healing. The cell and tissue movements (green arrows) that occur as specific cells undergo constriction of their apical sides (orange) are indicated in each context. Wound healing can involve apical constriction of an underlying layer of cells, or of a ring of cells (dashed line; just two such cells of the ring are drawn) at the periphery of a wound. homophilic cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin Development 2014 141: 1987-1998; doi: 10.1242/dev.102228 Developmental cue G protein-coupled receptor (a unit: G12/13) signaling recruiting to the apical membrane 6 Regulation and positioning of contractility - mechanotransduction PDZ-RhoGEF (guanin nucleotide exchange factor) RhoA (small GTPase) Mechanisms of apical constriction. Key components involved in apical constriction include Factin (red) and myosin (orange), which form contractile networks. Actinmyosin networks can be organized into contractile bundles/fibers or can be organized into a more loosely organized twodimensional network that underlies the plasma membrane, called the apical cortex. Shrinkage of the apical cortex (green arrows) is driven by actinmyosin contractions. Apical adherens junctions (AJs, gray) link cells, allowing apical actin-myosin contractions to drive tissue shape changes. In this example, only the apical actin cortex is shown. RhoA*-GTP Dia formin Model of protein localization in apical constriction. F-actin is present in an apical meshwork and in cables at the level of the AJ. Apical-basal-oriented microtubules (brown) transport argo myosin ( green), RhoGEF2 (blue), actin (orange), and endocytic vesicles ( purple). F-ACTIN ASSEMBLY Type II MYOSIN ACTIVATION APICAL CONSTRICTION ROCK myosin-phosphatase (Rho-associated coiled-coil kinase) myosin-P Rho family small GTPases: RhoA, Rac, and Cdc42 Dia: Diaphanous 3 2016.10.11. I. 7 TYPE: INVAGINATION („betüremlés, betűrődés”) Apical constriction → tissue folding and tube formation ventral midline epithelial cells creates a furrow where mesoderm folds inward http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2012.07.018 II. TYPE: INVOLUTION („legörbülés”) 8 The prospective mesoderm and part of endoderm form a cohesive tissue above the prospective blastopore apical constriction of so-called bottle cells marking the nascent blastopore in the dorsal gastrula region, where the Spemann-Mangold organizer (SMO) resides through that blastopore, which will expand laterally in the course of gastrulation, the mesoderm progenitors roll as a coherent tissue blastopore only when inside the gastrula do the mesodermal cells break away from the involuted tissue mass to migrate on the internal side of the uninvoluted tissue (blastocoel roof) 4 2016.10.11. III. TYPE: INGRESSION („beözönlés”) 9 EMT precedes internalization: progenitors undergo EMT to break away from the epithelium and move as individuals deep into the embryo, where they continue to migrate as individual cells blastopore = primitive streak Examples: Nematode and Amniotes: chicken and mouse crossection Functions and examples of apical constriction. (B) ingression of individual cells and epithelial-tomesenchymal transitions (EMT) IV. TYPE VARIATIONS OF THE I-III TYPES 10 zebrafish gastrulation: prospective mesoderm and endoderm cells (mesendoderm) of mesenchymal character move through the blastopore largely as individuals, but in a synchronized manner embryonic shield germ ring = blastopore 50% epiboly 5 2016.10.11. 11 EPIBOLY morphogenetic process that results in isotropic spreading of tissue, usually associated with its thinning. It is achieved by radial intercalation of cells from deeper to more superficial layers intercalations are random (not polarized) with respect to embryonic axes, they result in isotropic expansion of tissues around the nascent embryo classic examples: fish and frog cell shape changes directed migration of cells away from a tightly packed and thick cell mass at the embryo equator results in its thinning and spreading toward the vegetal pole example: zebrafish 12 CONVERGENCE AND EXTENSION evolutionarily conserved process that elongates the nascent germ layers from head to tail and narrows them from back to belly organogenesis: elongation of various tubular organs I. CONVERGENT EXTENSION • planar / medio-lateral intercalation: simultaneous AP elongation and mediolateral (ML) narrowing mediolaterally elongated cells that move between their anterior and posterior cell neighbors example: Xenopus Rearrangement of cells during convergent extension of the mesoderm in Xenopus embryos. (A) The dorsal region of the IMZD (which forms the notochord) was taken from an embryo labeled with fluorescienated dextran particles and placed into an unlabeled embryo. (B) Tracings of individual cells followed with video recorder during the formation of the notochord in vitro. (After Keller et al., 1985; Keller, 1986.) Convergent extension of the mesoderm appears to be autonomous, because the movements of the cells occur even if the cells are removed from the rest of the embryo (Keller, 1986) http://10e.devbio.com/ chapter 8 6 2016.10.11. polarized radial intercalation: cells in multilayered tissue intercalate from one layer into another, preferentially separating their anterior and posterior neighbors 13 zebrafish gastrulation polarized cell divisions the cell division plane is polarized such that the daughters are aligned with the AP axis directed cell migration migration trajectories of cells in the lateral mesoderm point dorsally, such that this population converges toward the dorsal midline trajectories of cells closer to the animal pole (anterior) are biased anteriorly, and those closer to the vegetal pole (posterior) are biased posteriorly undirected cell migration (random walk) endodermal precursors: ingress beneath the ectoderm during zebrafish gastrulation via the circumferential blastoderm margin (blastopore) and migrate on the surface of the yolk cell in an undirected fashion, thus extending the nascent cell population in animal (anterior) and later also in vegetal (posterior) direction extension without convergence Collections zebrafish 14 zebrafish Amniote BACKGROUND: PLANAR POLARITY 7 2016.10.11. Planar cell polarity (PCP) 15 refers to the coordinated alignment of cell polarity across the tissue plane Keys: asymmetric partitioning of cortical PCP components AND intercellular communication to coordinate polarity between neighboring cells Contributors: protein transport, endocytosis, and intercellular interactions Establishment of PCP involves (1) a global orienting cue (2) asymmetric segregation of dedicated polarity proteins, and (3) translation of polarity information into polarized outputs. www.jcb.org/cgi/doi/10.1083/jcb.201408039 The core system it was first describe in Drosophila 16 core PCP pathway is composed of the multipass transmembrane proteins Frizzled (Fz), Van Gogh (Vang; also known as Strabismus/Stbm), and cadherin Flamingo (Fmi; also known as Starry night/Stan), and cytosolic components Dishevelled (Dsh), Prickle (Pk), and Diego (Dgo) the asymmetric segregation of Fz–Dsh–Fmi and Vang–Pk–Fmi complexes to opposite sides of the cell relies on their mutual exclusion intracellularly and their preferential binding between neighboring cells develops progressively from initially uniform distributions → result of feedback amplification of an initial directional bias Feedback interactions between core PCP components. A Fz–Fmi complex interacts preferentially with a Vang–Fmi complex between cells, whereas proximal and distal complexes antagonize one another within the cell. (The cell biology of planar cell polarity, JCB 2014 (www.jcb.org/cgi/doi/10.1083/jcb.201408039)) 8 2016.10.11. WHAT MEDIATES THESE INTERCELLULAR ASYMMETRIC INTERACTIONS? 1) Vang and Fz interact directly → cell positioning 2) Fmi 17 → cell positioning 2) 4) is essential for the junctional recruitment of Fz and Vang Fmi homodimers appear to be functionally asymmetric exist in two forms depending on whether it is paired with Fz or Vang 1) unpaired Fmi is in a configuration that has higher affinity for Fmi–Fz than Fmi–Vang AMPLIFICATION OF ASYMMETRY 3) through clustering by PCP components clusters are stably associated with the plasma membrane (have limited lateral mobility) within the membrane and are resistant to endocytosis precise mechanism: ? direct transport transcytosis in proxamal-to-distal direction: subapical, non-centrosomal MTs: plus ends oriented with a slight distal bias (another, „feeding” system) sorting from the trans-Golgi-network (in vertebrates) 4) Repulsive interactions between Vang- and Fz-containing complexes: Pk and Dgo interact with the same domain on Dsh in a mutually exclusive manner positive feedback: stabilization of asymmetry by clustering The setup Downstream effectors 18 If PCP is the cell’s compass, it is also the steering wheel, directing downstream, polarized cell behaviors in response to global directional cues. PCP can polarize a wide range of cell behaviors, which suggests that it can intersect with numerous downstream effectors; drives CE (A) asymmetric cell division (B) positioning of centrosome and kinocilia (C) Polarized cell behaviors controlled by PCP. (A) PCP drives convergent extension (CE). CE in vertebrates is driven by mediolateral intercalation, which narrows the mediolateral axis while simultaneously lengthening the A-P axis. Mediolateral intercalation is accompanied by cell polarization and elongation and the formation of mediolateral protrusions, all of which require core PCP function. Pk localizes anteriorly (Ciruna et al., 2006; Yin et al., 2008), whereas Dsh localizes posteriorly (Yin et al., 2008). In addition, PCP proteins recruit myosin to A-P cell borders, leading to actomyosin contractility and junctional shrinking. (B) Asymmetric cell division. Drosophila sensory organ precursors (SOPs) divide asymmetrically along the epithelial plane, giving rise to distinct anterior and posterior daughters. Spindle alignment along the A-P axis is PCP dependent. Dsh interacts with Mud/NuMA and the dynein complex posteriorly while Vang links Pins/LGN-Mud/NuMA-dynein on the anterior. This links astral MTs to the A-P cortex, bringing the spindle into register with the A-P axis. (C) Positioning of the kinocilium in the inner ear. The placement of kinocilium in sensory hair cells of the inner ear determines the position of V-shaped stereocilia bundles. G i and mPins/LGN localize on the abneural side on the hair cell, where they are required for abneural positioning the Mtbased kinocilium. The collective alignment of kinocilia and stereocilia bundles across the epithelium requires the core PCP component Vangl2. Vangl2 (light green) localizes to the abneural side of supporting cells. Whether Fz (dark blue) associates on the opposite face is not yet clear (Ezan et al., 2013). 9 2016.10.11. In VERTEBRATES: WNT/PCP PATHWAY Wnts are clearly important regulators of PCP (but in different ways, such in Drosophila) 19 The Wnt additional components (ligands and membrane components) able to control the myosin contractility through Rac, RhoA and Rho kinase (ROK) it alters the E-cadherin membrane stabilitiy → endocytosis (see APICAL CONSTRICTION!!) E-cadherin may be indirectly linked to the actin cytoskeleton through b-catenin! b-catenin Ga12/13 competition! Vertebrate canonical Wnt signaling pathway (A). Vertebrate noncanonical Wnt pathways, Wnt/PCP (B), and Wnt/Ca 2+ (C). Diversin=Diablo, G (green): G-proteins Wnt canonical pathway → gene transcription BUT Wnt noncanonical pathways → actin cytoskeleton DOI: 10.1016/S0074-7696(07)61004-3 20 10