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GE45CH16-Mullins ARI ANNUAL REVIEWS 30 September 2011 20:47 Further Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. Click here for quick links to Annual Reviews content online, including: • Other articles in this volume • Top cited articles • Top downloaded articles • Our comprehensive search Maternal and Zygotic Control of Zebrafish Dorsoventral Axial Patterning Yvette G. Langdon and Mary C. Mullins∗ Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104; email: [email protected], [email protected] Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011. 45:357–77 Keywords First published online as a Review in Advance on September 13, 2011 animal-vegetal polarity, axis formation, bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), fibroblast growth factor (FGF), organizer, Wnt The Annual Review of Genetics is online at genet.annualreviews.org This article’s doi: 10.1146/annurev-genet-110410-132517 c 2011 by Annual Reviews. Copyright All rights reserved 0066-4197/11/1201-0357$20.00 ∗ Corresponding author. Abstract Vertebrate development begins with precise molecular, cellular, and morphogenetic controls to establish the basic body plan of the embryo. In zebrafish, these tightly regulated processes begin during oogenesis and proceed through gastrulation to establish and pattern the axes of the embryo. During oogenesis a maternal factor is localized to the vegetal pole of the oocyte that is a determinant of dorsal tissues. Following fertilization this vegetally localized dorsal determinant is asymmetrically translocated in the egg and initiates formation of the dorsoventral axis. Dorsoventral axis formation and patterning is then mediated by maternal and zygotic factors acting through Wnt, BMP (bone morphogenetic protein), Nodal, and FGF (fibroblast growth factor) signaling pathways, each of which is required to establish and/or pattern the dorsoventral axis. This review addresses recent advances in our understanding of the molecular factors and mechanisms that establish and pattern the dorsoventral axis of the zebrafish embryo, including establishment of the animal-vegetal axis as it relates to formation of the dorsoventral axis. 357 GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 INTRODUCTION Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. Animal-vegetal axis: the axis running from the blastodisc to the yolk in the zebrafish egg Mid-blastula transition (MBT): developmental point after fertilization when cells begin to divide asynchronously, the cell cycle slows, and wholesale zygotic gene transcription initiates Dorsal organizer: a signaling center that when transplanted is sufficient to establish a secondary dorsal axis Early vertebrate development involves the precise coordination and regulation of multiple signaling pathways and morphogenetic movements to establish the body plan. These tightly regulated processes begin during oogenesis as the oocyte matures, becomes fertilized, and the newly fertilized egg transitions through cellular cleavage, the process of gastrulation, and patterning of its pluripotent embryonic cells into a fully formed organism. Prior to gastrulation the vertebrate embryo establishes its primary axes, which provide the foundation for its body plan. Axis formation in zebrafish requires molecular cues that distinguish the animal pole marked by the blastodisc, from the vegetal pole where the zebrafish yolk resides. Additionally, signals are required to form and pattern the dorsoventral axis. In this review, we focus on the molecular factors and mechanisms that establish and pattern the dorsoventral axis of the zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryo, including establishment of the animal-vegetal axis during oogenesis as it relates to formation of the dorsoventral axis. In addition, we highlight areas of current research and suggest areas for future research that could provide a better understanding of zebrafish dorsoventral patterning. EARLY ZEBRAFISH EMBRYOGENESIS For the purpose of this review, early zebrafish development consists of the transition from the single cell zygote through the completion of gastrulation (59). Immediately following fertilization the chorion surrounding the egg lifts away from the egg surface, and the cytoplasm, which was previously interspersed with the yolk, begins streaming toward the animal pole to form the single cell blastodisc. The cleavage period of development begins at 45 minutes postfertilization (mpf ) and 10 cell-cycle cleavages ensue. During the cleavage stage of development, cells synchronously and rapidly divide every 15 minutes with a corresponding decrease in their mass following 358 Langdon · Mullins each division. Prior to the 16-cell stage, all cells of the embryo undergo incomplete cytokinesis, such that cell membranes are not complete at the yolk cell interface (59). In subsequent divisions, the central-most blastomeres undergo complete cytokinesis and only the peripheral blastomeres adjacent to the yolk incompletely cleave, leaving the cytoplasm of these vegetalmost blastomeres connected with the yolk. Following the cleavage period, the midblastula transition (MBT) ensues and three critical events are initiated: wholesale zygotic gene expression, formation of the yolk syncytial layer (YSL) and enveloping cell layer (EVL), and the morphogenetic process of epiboly. As the MBT initiates (512-cell stage), the cell cycle lengthens and the cells begin to divide asynchronously (53, 59). At the same time, the marginal blastomere membranes collapse and discharge their contents into the yolk cell, resulting in a layer of nuclei in the yolk [yolk synctial nuclei (YSN)] and establishment of the YSL. Although an extraembryonic tissue, the YSL is vital for development of the embryo proper, as it acts in mesoderm and endoderm induction (58, 104). The YSL also regulates epiboly, the process by which cells of the blastoderm and the YSN spread over and completely encapsulate the yolk (132). Epiboly movements initiate approximately one-and-a-half hours after the MBT and continue through the gastrula period of zebrafish development until the yolk is fully covered (105, 120). The YSN lead the EVL and blastoderm cells through the latter half of epiboly and appear to be the driving force behind their movement (5a, 11, 121, 124). Concurrent with the formation of the YSL is the initiation of zygotic gene expression. Some of the earliest zygotic genes expressed in the embryo are mediators of dorsoventral patterning, such as bozozok, chordin, goosecoid, vox/vent/ved, bmp2b, and bmp7 (79, 82, 113, 118, 123, 139). Several of these genes are required to mediate formation of, or regulate the functions of, the zebrafish dorsal organizer, which is morphologically defined by the shield, a thickening of cell layers that mark the dorsal side of the embryo (41, 108). The zebrafish GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. dorsal organizer is formed at the onset of gastrulation and functions as a source of secreted factors and cell autonomous transcription factors that act together to establish and pattern cell fates dorsally. Several maternal factors are now known that induce ventralizing factors throughout the blastula, which together with dorsal factors generate a BMP (bone morphogenetic protein) signaling gradient that patterns ventrolateral tissues. In conjunction with organizer formation and function, the gastrulation movements of convergence and extension shape the body plan of the early embryo (109). OOCYTE FACTORS AND ANIMAL-VEGETAL POLARITY Establishment of the dorsoventral axis depends on the prior establishment of the animalvegetal axis during oogenesis. The zebrafish female gamete, the oocyte, develops through four stages before it can be fertilized as an egg (70, 77, 90). Oocyte asymmetry and ultimately oocyte animal-vegetal polarity is first evident with the establishment of the Balbiani body during stage I of oogenesis (38, 62, 77). Until recently, little was known regarding Balbiani body formation or localization of its associated mRNAs to the vegetal pole of the oocyte and future egg. One key factor localized to the vegetal pole of the egg is a currently unidentified dorsal determinant(s), which acts to establish the dorsoventral axis of the embryo following its asymmetric translocation to embryonic marginal blastomeres. Thus, dorsoventral axis determination is linked to the establishment of the animal-vegetal axis. The Balbiani body originates adjacent to the nucleus on the future vegetal side of the oocyte and subsequently translocates to the prospective vegetal pole, where it releases its contents and dissociates (Figure 1a) (8, 78). The Balbiani body is composed of mitochondria, as well as nuage, mRNAs and proteins, which become localized to the vegetal pole of the oocyte following Balbiani body disassembly (Figure 1a). A recently identified maternaleffect gene bucky ball encodes a novel protein required for formation of the Balbiani body and animal-vegetal polarity of the oocyte and egg (1, 23, 78). In the absence of Bucky ball, the Balbiani body fails to form, although components of the Balbiani body are evident in the oocyte but are no longer localized. The absence of the Balbiani body likely causes the animalvegetal polarity defect of this mutant. Animal and vegetal pole transcripts are expressed but mislocalized in bucky ball mutants (8, 23, 78). mRNAs normally vegetally restricted are instead found throughout the oocyte, whereas transcripts normally animally restricted are localized radially at the oocyte cortex. Bucky ball protein localizes to the Balbiani body itself (8), making it tempting to speculate that it may act directly to assemble this symmetry-breaking structure. A second newly identified maternal-effect gene, microtubule actin crosslinking factor 1 (macf1), also regulates animal-vegetal polarity in zebrafish (Figure 1a) (37). Macf1 belongs to the spectraplakin family of proteins, which associate with actin and microtubules (51, 106). In the zebrafish macf1 mutant (magellan), the Balbiani body is enlarged, the nucleus and Balbiani body are mislocalized, and peripheral regions of the oocyte near the cortex are disrupted (37). This disruption likely results from a lack of stable microtubules at the oocyte periphery, suggesting a role for Macf1 in linking stable microtubules to the cortex, possibly through its direct binding of cytoplasmic microtubules and the oocyte actin cortex. In magellan mutant oocytes, the Balbiani body as well as the transcripts associated with it fail to reach the vegetal cortex and remain in what appears to be a persisting Balbiani body, thus causing a defect in animal-vegetal polarity. It is currently unknown whether Macf1 functions directly or indirectly in promoting proper Balbiani body function and disassembly. Although two factors acting in the formation and localization of the Balbiani body and thus animal-vegetal polarity are now known, a multitude of questions remain. Specifically, what factors act upstream of Bucky ball to initiate Balbiani body formation? How is the www.annualreviews.org • Zebrafish Dorsoventral Patterning Balbiani body: a conserved structure from insects to mammals that carries vegetally destined transcripts and proteins, and marks the future vegetal pole of the oocyte; also called the mitochondrial cloud 359 GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 a 20:47 c Oogenesis Animal mRNAs Maternal factors promote ventral cell fate Caveolin-1 Nucleus Bucky ball Bb Pou2 bmp2b/4/7 Macf1 Radar Non-Balbiani associated mRNAs Stage I: Balbiani body formation, localization, and dissociation Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. b β-catenin Tob1a Nucleus Kzp Vegetal mRNAs Syntabulin mRNA wnt8 vox/vent/ved Runx2bt2 Stage II/III: Localization of animal and vegetal pole transcripts d Embryogenesis pou2 radar runx2bt2 pou2 radar runx2bt2 Dorsal determinant Syntabulin pou2 radar runx2bt2 Syntabulin 2o transport mechanism? Transport Dorsal determinants β-catenin DD released ? Syntabulin degraded Kinesin I Maternal factors promote dorsal cell fate Wnt target genes hecate Microtubule network Animal Ventral Dorsal Vegetal Figure 1 Maternal factors establish both the animal-vegetal and dorsoventral axes. (a) Schematic of early stage zebrafish oocytes. In stage I oocytes (left), the nucleus is located centrally and the Balbiani body is located adjacent to the nucleus. Bucky ball is required for Balbiani body formation, whereas Macf1 regulates Balbiani body size and translocation to the prospective vegetal cortex in mid- to late-stage I oocytes. Following its localization to the prospective vegetal pole in late-stage I oocytes, the Balbiani body disassembles, and its associated transcripts become localized to the vegetal cortex (blue, green circles). In stage II/III oocytes, additional non-Balbiani body–associated transcripts also become localized vegetally (orange circles) and animally (red circles). (b) Schematic of one-cell- and two-cell-stage zebrafish embryos. In the one-cell and two-cell stage embryos, some maternal transcripts, for example, radar, pou2, and runx2bt2, are localized to these animal pole blastomeres. The yolk cell consists of a microtubule network containing the motor protein Kinesin I. Syntabulin protein associates with Kinesin I and possibly also with the dorsal determinant(s) to facilitate its transport to the prospective dorsal side of the embryo. Once at the dorsal side Syntabulin is degraded, and a second transport mechanism is postulated to translocate the dorsal determinant(s) further to the future dorsal blastomeres. (c) Maternal factors promoting ventral cell fates. (d ) Maternal factors promoting dorsal cell fates. initial asymmetric localization of the Balbiani body determined? Is it stochastically determined or does it rely on an earlier established oocyte asymmetry? What additional factors act in conjunction with Bucky ball and Macf1 to establish and translocate the Balbiani body to the vegetal pole? Germline determinants 360 Langdon · Mullins are known to be translocated vegetally by the Balbiani body (8, 61, 62, 65, 78, 142), but what additional factors are transported in the Balbiani body and what are their roles during development? Importantly, what is the nature of the vegetally localized dorsal determinant(s) that establishes the dorsoventral axis of the Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 embryo, and how is it localized? Efforts are currently under way to identify and characterize maternal factors and mutants that may affect these processes. Because zygotically required genes certainly also play important maternal roles in these processes, additional studies are required to examine these genes for maternal function. To address these questions, the development of efficient methods to culture oocytes and manipulate them via morpholino knockdown and misexpression of gene function is needed (8, 16, 115). Furthermore, genetic manipulations that can efficiently generate germline loss-of-function clones, chimeras, or conditional mutations will greatly facilitate the elucidation of these mechanisms (7, 12, 13, 88). MATERNAL FACTORS AND DORSOVENTRAL AXIS FORMATION Establishing the Dorsal Side of the Embryo Residing at the vegetal pole of the egg are determinants that are crucial to establish the dorsoventral axis. The nature of the determinant(s) is not known in zebrafish, nor if it is localized vegetally via the Balbiani body or via the late vegetal localization pathway (Figure 1a) (78, 87, 134). Within the early embryo, asymmetric translocation of the dorsal determinant(s) from the vegetal pole to marginal blastomeres via microtubules establishes the dorsal side of the embryo through activation of a Wnt signaling pathway, a mechanism conserved in Xenopus (132a). Resultant nuclear localization of β-catenin then activates dorsal-specific gene expression. Evidence for a microtubule-dependent dorsal determinant transport mechanism in zebrafish is derived from several observations. When microtubule networks of early cleavage stage embryos are disrupted by UV irradiation, cold temperatures, or drug treatment, the embryo becomes ventralized (52). Further evidence for the requirement of microtubules in this process comes from the maternal-effect brom bones mutant, which produces embryos with disordered microtubules at their vegetal cortex and ventralized embryos, consistent with a microtubule network transporting a dorsal determinant(s) from the vegetal pole to the dorsal marginal blastomeres (81). Further elucidation of the microtubulederived transport mechanism came with the recent molecular identification of the zebrafish maternal-effect mutant gene tokkaebi as the microtubule cargo linker protein gene syntabulin (93). The syntabulin transcript is localized vegetally through the Balbiani body–dependent localization mechanism, and loss of syntabulin causes ventralization of the embryonic axis (93, 94). Interestingly, the Syntabulin protein associates with the motor protein Kinesin 1 to link cargo to the microtubule network, and in zebrafish, Syntabulin is translocated in a microtubule-dependent manner asymmetrically from the vegetal pole of the egg to a lateral position. Thus, it is hypothesized that Syntabulin mediates the asymmetric transport of the dorsal determinant(s) toward the prospective dorsal side of the embryo (Figure 1b,d ). Once laterally translocated, Syntabulin is degraded and postulated to release the dorsal determinant(s) to be transported by alternate means to the prospective dorsal-marginal blastomeres (93). Zebrafish maternal tokkaebi mutants lack Syntabulin and therefore are unable to initiate the transport of the dorsal determinant(s), resulting in a failure to activate Wnt signaling, which is required to initiate dorsal cell fate specification and establish the dorsoventral axis (93, 94). It will be interesting to determine if Syntabulin also functions in dorsal determinant translocation in Xenopus and how homologous the mechanisms are between different vertebrate embryos. Another maternal factor, hecate, still uncharacterized molecularly, acts upstream of, or in parallel to, maternal β-catenin to promote dorsoventral axis formation (75). The ventralized phenotype of hecate mutant embryos can be rescued by expression of all Wnt signaling pathway components tested, and thus it may function upstream of, or in parallel to, www.annualreviews.org • Zebrafish Dorsoventral Patterning Maternal-effect mutant: the genotype of the mother is the cause of the embryonic phenotype; a maternally expressed gene that functions in embryogenesis 361 GE45CH16-Mullins a ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 b Organizer formation, function, and regulation Dorsoventral patterning zygotic factors Bmp1 Tolloid Admp Chordin Tsg Bozozok Bmp2b/4/7 Bozozok Cvl2 FGF Squint Lnx2b V FGF D V Goosecoid Chordin Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. Sizzled β-catenin Bmp2b/4/7 Vox/Vent/Ved D V Bmp2b/4/7 Chordin Goosecoid Bmp2b/4/7 Admp X Bozozok Vox/Vent/Ved FGF Lnx2b D SoxB1 Follistatin-like 2 Admp Bozozok Wnt8 Lnx2b Noggin1 Goosecoid Vox/Vent/Ved Wnt8 Figure 2 Maternal and zygotic genes that establish the dorsal organizer and pattern the dorsoventral axis. (a) Schematic of maternal and zygotic factors required for organizer formation. Wiring diagrams represent an approximation of the onset and maintenance of proteins required for initiation and establishment of the zebrafish organizer. (b) Schematic of the major zygotic factors acting in dorsoventral patterning. Black names indicate proteins that promote dorsal cell fates. Blue names indicate proteins that promote ventral cell fates. Red T-bars indicate dorsalizing proteins that inhibit ventral genes or proteins. Black T-bars indicate ventralizing proteins that inhibit dorsal genes or proteins. Blue arrows indicate positive interactions between ventral promoting genes. Black arrows indicate positive interactions between dorsal promoting genes. Green arrows indicate a dorsalizing or ventralizing gene that promotes genes with the opposing activity. Wnt/β-catenin signaling to establish the dorsoventral axis (Figure 1d ) (75). Maternal β-catenin in zebrafish is present throughout the blastoderm, but it only localizes to the nucleus of dorsal marginal cells (111). This nuclear localization is the first indication of dorsoventral polarity in the embryo and is required to establish dorsal cell fates. There are two maternally expressed β-catenin genes in zebrafish, β-catenin 1 and 2 (4). In the absence of maternal β-catenin 2, zebrafish embryos are ventralized as observed in the β-catenin 2 mutant ichabod (4, 56). Recent results suggest that maternal Caveolin-1 may be a negative regulator of β-catenin, binding β-catenin and inhibiting its translocation to the nucleus (Figure 1c) (86). Once in the nucleus, a second protein, Tob1a, can bind β-catenin and inhibit its ability to bind LEF1 and promote dorsal cell fate specification (137). Loss of Tob1a causes 362 Langdon · Mullins dorsalization of the embryonic axis, suggesting that it functions ventrally to inhibit maternal β-catenin-derived transcriptional activation in ventral cells (Figure 1c). Activation of Wnt signaling and β-catenin nuclear translocation results in the expression of genes required for dorsal organizer formation or function, including bozozok, chordin, and goosecoid (82, 113, 123, 139). The balance between expression of genes required for ventral cell fates and those promoting dorsal cell fates patterns the dorsoventral axis in zebrafish (Figure 2b). In conjunction with Wnt/β-catenin, Nodal signaling is required for organizer formation and mesendoderm formation (28). An additional maternal requirement for the zebrafish nodal gene squint during dorsoventral axis formation has been suggested, but remains controversial. Morpholino knockdown of squint suggests a role in dorsoventral axis formation (35); GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 however, other loss-of-function studies have not found a role for squint in this process (5, 43). Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. Promoting Ventral Cell Fates Like the role of β-catenin in dorsal cell fate specification, it has been hypothesized that a maternally regulated pathway establishes ventral cell fates (36, 119). It is well established that zygotic BMP signaling is required for ventral cell fate specification, but the upstream factors initiating bmp expression have not been extensively studied. Zebrafish Radar/Gdf6a, another member of the BMP class of proteins, was identified as the first maternal signaling factor regulating ventral cell fate specification (Figure 1b,c). Gain- and loss-of-function of Radar cause embryonic ventralization and dorsalization, respectively. Radar appears to function upstream of Bmp2b, Bmp7a, and Alk8, and a dominant negative form of Radar can block the initiation of bmp2b expression in the embryo (36, 119). Additional evidence for the active promotion of ventral cell fates comes from studies of the transcription factor pou2, which is defective in the maternal-zygotic (MZ) mutant spiel-ohne-grenzen (100). MZpou2 mutants lack bmp2b and bmp4 expression, and fail to maintain bmp7a expression. Maternal pou2 likely functions upstream of the bmp genes because their expression can rescue the dorsalized phenotype of MZpou2 mutants (Figure 1c) (100). A third maternal factor, runx2b type2 (runx2bt2), is required for ventral cell fate specification (30). Best known for its role as a transcriptional regulator of skeletal development (63, 112), zebrafish runx2bt2 is expressed in oocytes and eggs as well as during gastrulation. Morpholino-mediated translational inhibition of maternal runx2bt2 strongly dorsalizes the embryo. Runx2bt2 appears to act as a direct transcriptional activator of vox, vent, and ved (vox/vent/ved ), which promote ventral cell fate specification by inhibiting the ventrolateral expression of dorsal genes, such as bozozok (Figure 2), and maintaining ventrolateral expression of bmp2b, bmp7a, and wnt8 during gastrulation (30, 44, 55, 99, 118). Runx2bt2 binding sites are found in the promoters of the vox/vent/ved genes, and Runx2bt2 regulation of a ved reporter in the zebrafish embryo depends on the Runx2bt2 binding site. Loss of Runx2bt2 in the embryo results in a loss of all ved expression and a one hour delay in expression of vox and vent. Given that Ved functions redundantly to Vox and Vent, it is unclear if the embryonic dorsalization caused by loss of Runx2bt2 is due solely to the altered expression of vox, vent, and ved, or if Runx2bt2 regulates the expression of other ventral specifying genes. The evidence from these studies establishes Runx2bt2 as an independent maternal gene regulatory mechanism to Pou2 that actively promotes ventral cell fate specification (30). Ventralization is actively promoted by the embryo and thus must be repressed dorsally to allow dorsal cell fate specification (119). The identification of radar and pou2 as maternal factors that initiate or activate zygotic bmp expression and the identification of runx2bt2 as a maternal factor regulating vox/vent/ved expression show that ventral identity is indeed actively promoted maternally in the embryo. Thus, both ventral cell fates and dorsal cell fates, through establishment of the organizer, are actively initiated and regulated during dorsoventral axis formation and patterning. Clearly, there are many missing components to the maternal pathways that initiate ventral zygotic gene expression. Further maternal-effect mutant screens and morpholino knockdown studies of maternal mRNAs are needed to identify these missing factors in dorsoventral patterning. ZYGOTIC GENE REGULATION AND DORSOVENTRAL PATTERNING Organizer Formation and Dorsoventral Patterning The zebrafish organizer is an important inducer of dorsal cell fate and regulator of dorsoventral axis patterning. Among the first zygotic genes expressed in the embryo and www.annualreviews.org • Zebrafish Dorsoventral Patterning 363 ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 acting in organizer formation and function is the homeodomain transcriptional repressor, bozozok. bozozok is expressed just prior to the MBT, when wholesale zygotic gene expression is initiated (53, 71). Maternal β-catenin and its DNA-binding cofactor Lef1 likely directly activate bozozok because Lef1 binds to sites within the bozozok promoter, and regions containing these sites are required for bozozok expression (71, 107). Expression of bozozok is initially observed in dorsal blastomeres prior to its restriction to the dorsal YSL (64, 139). bozozok is a mediator of dorsal organizer function by repressing in dorsal regions the expression of the ventralizing genes vox/vent/ved, bmp2b, and wnt8 (Figure 2a) (71, 122). Bozozok directly mediates repression of bmp2b expression by binding to and regulating the bmp2b promoter (71). In the absence of bozozok, the embryonic shield fails to form, dorsal organizer function is impaired, and embryos lack midline mesoderm and are weakly ventralized (27). Consistent with its function in mediating dorsal organizer function, misexpression of bozozok causes an Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. GE45CH16-Mullins a BMP, Nodal, Wnt, and FGF signals just after MBT expansion of the dorsal organizer and can induce a secondary axis (64, 102, 139). The TGF-β Nodal signaling pathway is also required to establish the shield and pattern the dorsal organizer (25, 28, 126). Nodal signaling induces expression of dorsal mesendodermal genes and inhibitors of ventral cell fates, such as chordin and goosecoid (Figures 2 and 3) (21, 113). Interestingly, the organizer gene goosecoid can inhibit ventral BMP signals required for dorsoventral patterning independently of the BMP antagonist chordin (21). Antagonistic to bozozok are the transcriptional repressors vox/vent/ved, which are first expressed at mid-blastula stages. vox/vent/ved function to repress the dorsal organizer promoting genes bozozok, chordin, and goosecoid, in ventrolateral regions. Loss of vox/vent/ved expression results in the ventral expansion of bozozok, chordin, and goosecoid expression and of dorsal cell fates (34, 44, 82, 98). Rnx2bt2 is required to initiate vox/vent/ved expression, whereas Wnt8 and BMP signaling maintain their expression during gastrulation (3, 30, 98, 99). b BMP gradient and early Nodal, Wnt, and FGF signals at late blastula BMP gradient Organizer Nodal V FGF Wnt D V D Figure 3 Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), Nodal, Wnt, and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling in overlapping domains act to pattern dorsoventral embryonic tissues. (a) Schematic of signals just after the mid-blastula transition that promote the establishment of the zebrafish dorsal organizer. (b) Schematic of BMP signaling gradient and other signals acting during late blastula/early gastrula stages. 364 Langdon · Mullins Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 Wnt8 maintains vox/vent/ved expression to restrict organizer size and loss of wnt8 results in dorsalized embryos with an expanded organizer (98, 99). Double loss of wnt8 and bmp2b function elicits a radial expansion of dorsal gene expression identical to loss of vox/vent/ved (98). Maternal β-catenin 1 and 2 appear to function downstream of Wnt8 signaling as the double knockdown of β-catenin 1 and 2 produces dorsalized embryos with an expanded organizer, whereas maternal β-catenin 2/ichabod mutants are ventralized (4, 56). Initially, organizer gene expression is absent in both ichabod and β-catenin 1/2 double knockdown mutant embryos; however, by gastrulation, organizer gene expression is restored in β-catenin double knockdown embryos, indicating that an alternate pathway during gastrulation can induce organizer gene expression (4, 56). Recently, SoxB1 family members (Sox3 and Sox19a/b) have been identified as transcriptional repressors that must be excluded from dorsal-marginal blastomeres for the organizer to form (Figure 2a) (116). Although overexpression of Sox3/Sox19a/b is sufficient to inhibit organizer formation, the quadruple knockdown of Sox2/3/19a/19b results in dorsoventral patterning defects without affecting organizer formation. These results indicate that Sox family members have no direct role in organizer formation, but instead are important to maintain the balance between ventral and dorsal cell fates (96, 116). The dorsoventral patterning defects observed in the quadruple knockdown appear to be due to decreases in bmp2b and bmp7 expression (96). The zebrafish embryo develops rapidly, undergoing dynamic changes in gene expression, the regulation of multiple signaling pathways, and the activation of transcription factors to modulate dorsal organizer formation and patterning of the dorsoventral axis. Considering the rapidity with which this patterning occurs (during less than eight hours), protein degradation is expected to play an important role in regulating the dynamic changes in gene expression and patterning in the early zebrafish embryo. Recently, it has been found that Bozozok protein turnover is modulated through an E3 ubiquitin ligase pathway mediated by maternally supplied lnx2b (previously called lnx-l ) (Figure 2a) (102, 103). Lnx2b can bind to Bozozok, resulting in polyubiquitination and proteosomal degradation of Bozozok. In the absence of Lnx2b, the dorsal organizer is expanded, indicating that Lnx2b regulates organizer size by mediating Bozozok protein turnover (102). Identification of Lnx2b as a mediator of Bozozok protein degradation raises the question of how the turnover of other proteins required for organizer formation and function is regulated during the rapid development of the zebrafish embryo. BMP family members may also regulate organizer size. Antidorsalizing morphogenetic protein (Admp) is a BMP that is exclusively expressed in the dorsal midline of the embryo (Figure 2a) (20, 69, 135). Loss of admp results in a modest expansion of the organizer, and maintenance of admp expression is bozozok and nodal dependent (69, 135). Thus, refinement of organizer size may result from precisely established domains of bozozok and admp expression (69). BMP Signaling Genes encoding BMP signaling components have been identified as zebrafish mutants defective in dorsoventral patterning, including swirl/bmp2b, snailhouse/bmp7a, somitabun/smad5, lost-a-fin/alk8, mini fin/tolloid, chordin/chordino, and ogon/sizzled (14, 19, 42, 60, 66, 83, 85, 89, 110, 113). Molecular-genetic studies of these genes have facilitated the elucidation of the mechanisms by which BMP signaling patterns the embryo. BMPs are members of the TGF-β family of signaling molecules, which includes TGF-β, Nodal, BMP, and Activin (29). BMPs are secreted ligands that bind as a dimer to serine-threonine kinase transmembrane receptors classified as type I and type II. Each BMP monomer binds to two type I receptors and one type II receptor. The other BMP monomer binds the same two type I receptors and an additional type II receptor. In an active signaling complex, the constitutively active type II www.annualreviews.org • Zebrafish Dorsoventral Patterning 365 ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 receptor phosphorylates and activates the type I receptor (73). The activated type I receptor then phosphorylates the regulatory Smads (Smads 1, 5, or 8), which in turn associate with the co-Smad (Smad4) and translocate into the nucleus to regulate expression of BMP target genes (24, 73). BMP homodimers and heterodimers form and in several in vitro cell culture assays, heterodimers exhibit higher activity than homodimers (2, 40, 45, 46, 129, 144). Although BMP heterodimers have been postulated to function in developing vertebrate embryos, only recently has their requirement been demonstrated in vivo. Molecular-genetic studies together with biochemical evidence in zebrafish demonstrate that although BMP homodimers and heterodimers are both present in the embryo, only Bmp2b/Bmp7a heterodimer signaling leads to Smad1/5 phosphorylation and dorsoventral patterning (74). Furthermore, this BMP heterodimer signals through an obligate BMP type I heteromeric complex composed of Alk3/6 and Alk8 (the Alk2 paralog in zebrafish) to pattern the dorsoventral axis of the embryo. bmp2b and bmp7a expression is initiated rapidly throughout the blastoderm following the MBT. Expression of bmp4 is initiated slightly later in a ventrally restricted domain, and its expression depends on bmp2b and bmp7a. A BMP signaling gradient begins to form in late blastula stages and by the onset of gastrulation, BMP signaling is cleared from the dorsal side of the embryo (Figure 3). Attenuation of BMP signaling in dorsal regions is mediated first by Bozozok repression of bmp2b expression in the dorsal-most blastomeres (71), followed by signal repression by the BMP antagonists Chordin, Noggin 1, and Follistatin-like 2 (17). The newly established BMP signaling gradient can be visualized by use of an antibody specific to the phosphorylated form of Smad1/5 (128). BMPs function as a morphogen with high levels of BMP signaling specifying ventral tissues, moderate levels specifying lateral tissues, and little-to-no BMP activity is required to specify dorsal tissues (22, 91). bmp expression and ventral cell fates are maintained through Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. GE45CH16-Mullins 366 Langdon · Mullins several autoregulatory feedback loops (82, 101). One of these loops requires the transcriptional regulators Vox, Vent, and Ved (Figure 2). Vox/Vent/Ved function to maintain the gradient of BMP activity during mid-to-late gastrulation through maintenance of bmp expression and indirectly through Wnt8-mediated repression ventrally of bmp antagonist gene expression (44, 98, 118, 130). Although BMP signaling is initiated shortly after the MBT in zebrafish, BMP signaling is not required for dorsoventral patterning until the late blastula/early gastrula stage (Figures 2 and 3) (19, 42, 60, 66, 85, 110, 128). Disruption of BMP signaling with heat-shock-inducible chordin expression at blastula or early gastrula stages results in strongly dorsalized embryos, whereas BMP signaling disrupted at progressively later gastrula stages allows progressively larger anterior domains of ventral tissue to be specified, and dorsalization becomes restricted to progressively more posterior regions of the embryo (128). These studies show that BMP signaling functions in a progressive temporal manner along the anterior-posterior axis in patterning dorsoventral tissues (128). Induction of BMP signaling in an MZ-lost-a-fin (alk8) mutant that lacks BMP signaling indicates that posterior tissues require BMP signaling at progressively later intervals, rather than requiring signaling for a longer duration (128). It is postulated that temporal cues or competence mediates the progressive cellular responses to BMP signaling and thus coordinates patterning of the dorsoventral axis with patterning of the anterior-posterior axis (128). The BMP Signaling Gradient A BMP signaling gradient forms along the dorsoventral axis and patterns tissues as a morphogen with high levels ventrally and low levels dorsally (Figure 3). The BMP gradient is established and maintained through positive and negative regulators of BMP signaling. BMP antagonists emanating from the embryonic shield inhibit BMP signaling and bmp expression in dorsal regions Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 (17, 55, 71, 118). In zebrafish, Chordin is the only BMP antagonist acting nonredundantly in dorsoventral patterning (17). Chordin binds BMPs abrogating their ability to bind BMP receptors and initiate signaling (18, 73, 84). Zebrafish chordino mutant embryos are moderately ventralized, whereas chordin overexpression dorsalizes embryos (39, 84, 113). Chordin function is unique among BMP antagonists, as its transcripts extend beyond the boundaries of the embryonic shield and include the dorsal half of the embryo (84, 113). Two additional BMP antagonists, Noggin1 and Follistatin-like 2, function redundantly with Chordin to further refine the BMP signaling domain (Figure 2b) (17, 31). noggin1 and follistatin-like 2 are first expressed at blastula and early gastrula stages, respectively, within the dorsal organizer, and knockdown of each individually has no effect on dorsoventral patterning. However, knockdown of either noggin1 or follistatin-like 2 in chordin morphants enhances the chordin ventralization phenotype (17). Triple loss of chordin, noggin1, and follistatin-like 2 caused a similar strong ventralization but with increased penetrance compared to the double knockdown phenotypes (17). Like Chordin, Noggin1 and Follistatin-like 2 directly bind BMP ligands and block their association with receptors. Together Chordin, Noggin1, and Follistatin-like 2 antagonism is key to generating the BMP signaling gradient. Additional extracellular factors further modulate BMP signaling levels across the embryo. A critical secreted protein that promotes ventral cell fate specification is the matrix metalloprotease Tolloid (Figure 2b). Loss of tolloid results in mildly dorsalized embryos as observed in the mini fin zebrafish mutant (14). Tolloid binds and proteolytically cleaves the BMP antagonist Chordin to pattern ventral tail tissues during postgastrula stages (6, 14, 15, 97). Subsequently, it was determined that zebrafish Bmp1, a Tolloid-like protease, functions redundantly with Tolloid to cleave Chordin during gastrulation (50). Loss of Bmp1 and Tolloid strongly dorsalizes embryos (50). Thus, Bmp1 and Tolloid function in concert to promote BMP signaling ventrally through restriction of the BMP antagonist Chordin during gastrulation. Sizzled, a secreted Frizzled-related protein, functions as a competitive inhibitor of Tolloid, binding its active site, and thus abrogating its ability to bind and cleave Chordin (18, 73). Sizzled thus promotes dorsal cell fates and is unique among dorsal promoting genes in that it is exclusively expressed ventrally beginning at late blastula stages (Figure 2b) (80, 138). Loss of sizzled in the ogon mutant causes ventralization. Although an inhibitor of BMP signaling, sizzled expression is positively regulated by BMP signaling (39, 83, 131, 138). Thus, Sizzled functions as a negative feedback inhibitor to limit BMP signaling and ventral cell fate specification. Two additional extracellular secreted factors, Twisted gastrulation and Crossveinless2, function ventrally to promote BMP signaling in zebrafish. Twisted gastrulation can bind Chordin and BMPs and functions to enhance BMP signaling in zebrafish (10, 72, 95, 114, 136). Twisted gastrulation has been shown to increase Tolloid-mediated cleavage of Chordin but can also function independently of Chordin and Tolloid to promote BMP signaling (72, 136). In zebrafish, morpholino knockdown of twisted gastrulation causes dorsalization of the embryo, which can be rescued by expression of BMP signaling pathway components, indicating that Twisted gastrulation acts upstream of Bmp2b/Bmp7 (72, 136). Unexpectedly, overexpression of twisted gastrulation also dorsalizes embryos (72), suggesting that Twisted gastrulation protein levels are normally tightly regulated in the embryo. Similar to twisted gastrulation, loss of crossveinless-2 (cvl2) function in zebrafish indicates that it promotes BMP signaling, whereas overexpression of Cvl2 causes inhibition of BMP signaling (73). Morpholino knockdown of cvl2 moderately dorsalizes the embryo, whereas overexpression causes weak dorsalization and ventralization of embryos. Cvl2 contains cysteine-rich domains similar to those found in Chordin family members. Its expression is initiated at mid-blastula stages and www.annualreviews.org • Zebrafish Dorsoventral Patterning 367 ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 is restricted ventrally at early gastrula stages through a positive BMP signaling feedback loop (101). The protein has a cleaved and noncleaved form, and there is evidence suggesting that cleavage of Cvl2 converts the protein from a BMP antagonist to a BMP agonist (101). Noncleaved Cvl2 is localized to the extracellular membrane and may sequester BMP ligands away from their receptors. However, cleaved Cvl2 can bind both BMP ligand and Chordin and may initiate a conformational change in Chordin, altering its ability to inhibit BMP signaling and thus promoting BMP activity (101, 143). Tolloid, Twisted gastrulation, and Cvl2 all promote BMP signaling through Chordindependent regulation (Figure 2b) (18, 141). Considering that BMP heterodimers are the obligate signaling ligand complex, but that homodimers are also present in the embryo (74), one might consider if Tolloid preferentially cleaves Chordin bound to a Bmp2b/Bmp7 heterodimer as opposed to a Bmp2b or Bmp7 homodimer to promote BMP signaling. Alternatively or additionally, Twisted gastrulation or Cvl2 may preferentially promote Bmp2b/Bmp7 heterodimer signaling over BMP homodimer signaling, thus contributing to the exclusive signaling of BMP heterodimers in the zebrafish gastrula. The cohort of extracellular factors required to establish, refine, and maintain the BMP signaling gradient highlights the importance of shaping the gradient and ensuring its robustness to natural fluctuations. In conjunction with the multiple levels of extracellular modulation built into the system, the gradient is reinforced through positive and negative transcriptional feedback loops. This self-regulating system makes it possible, for example, to ubiquitously express bmp pathway components in mRNA injection experiments and rescue the corresponding bmp pathway mutant (14, 19, 92, 110, 113), although bmp component expression is normally restricted to either ventral or dorsal regions. Due to the tight and robust modulation of ligand levels, the embryo can Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. GE45CH16-Mullins 368 Langdon · Mullins effectively negate the bmp component misexpression (within a range) and generate a BMP gradient that can completely rescue mutants to normal development. Although we understand the basic biochemical and genetic properties of many of the BMP pathway components discussed here, we still do not understand how they function together in a spatial and temporal manner to generate the robust BMP gradient that functions throughout gastrulation to pattern the embryo. ZYGOTIC WNT SIGNALING AND DORSOVENTRAL PATTERNING During the cleavage stage canonical Wnt signaling through maternal β-catenin 2 establishes the dorsoventral axis by inducing dorsal tissues and initiating formation of the zebrafish organizer (Figure 1d ). After this initial dorsal phase of Wnt signaling, zygotic marginal Wnt signaling is required to promote ventral cell fates (Figure 3). In ventrolateral gastrula regions Wnt8 signaling together with BMP signaling maintain expression of the vox/vent/ved transcriptional repressors, which restrict the expression of dorsal promoting genes, including bozozok to the dorsal-most regions (3, 98, 99). Loss of the bicistronic wnt8 gene dorsalizes, as well as posteriorizes, the embryo (57, 68, 109, 117). Loss of wnt3a by morpholino knockdown appears to enhance the wnt8 loss of function defects (117), suggesting that wnt3a plays a partially redundant modulatory role to wnt8 primarily in anterioposterior patterning. Dorsally, wnt8 expression is inhibited by Bozozok (26). Recently, the transcription factor Kaiso zinc finger–containing protein (Kzp) was identified as a maternal factor required for the zygotic expression of wnt8 (Figure 1c) (140). Kzp misexpression and loss of function posteriorized and dorsalized embryos, respectively (140). Kzp adds to the maternally expressed transcription factors of Runx2b and Pou2 that regulate the expression of specific zygotic genes acting in dorsoventral patterning. GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. FIBROBLAST GROWTH FACTOR SIGNALING AND DORSOVENTRAL PATTERNING FGF signaling is implicated in a number of developmental processes from early patterning and axis formation to organogenesis (47– 49, 54). The roles of FGF signaling during dorsoventral patterning are not well understood, although it is clear that it acts in part by inhibiting BMP signaling (Figure 2b) (32, 33). Zebrafish fgf3/fgf8/fgf24 are expressed in the dorsal margin at blastula stages and function to repress the initial dorsal expression of bmp2b and bmp7 independently of Chordin (Figure 3) (32, 33). fgf8 depletion alone is insufficient to ventralize embryos; however, its depletion enhances the ventralization of chordino mutants. These results suggest functional redundancy of Fgf8 with additional Fgfs and that a specific role for fgf8 in dorsoventral patterning is normally masked by Chordin (33). Additional studies suggest an earlier role for Fgf signaling in organizer formation (Figure 2a). In the absence of Fgf signaling, β-catenin is insufficient to rescue ichabod mutants, indicating a requirement for Fgf signaling downstream of β-catenin to induce organizer formation (76). PERSPECTIVES In recent years, a number of discoveries have expanded our knowledge of early patterning and axis formation in zebrafish. From recessive maternal-effect mutagenesis screens, factors functioning in animal-vegetal polarity, regulators of previously identified dorsoventral axis patterning components, and a component of an early microtubule transport network have been identified. However, there are still many unidentified factors involved in formation of the vertebrate body plan; in fact, fundamental questions remain. For example, what is the identity of the vegetally localized dorsal determinant(s)? In Xenopus, vegetally localized maternal wnt11 and wnt5a appear to be the dorsal determinants acting in conjunction with cortical rotation to activate Wnt signaling and β-catenin accumulation in the prospective dorsal-most blastomeres (9, 67, 125, 133). Thus, it is tempting to speculate that a Wnt family member could be the elusive dorsal determinant necessary to establish the dorsal side of the zebrafish embryo. What is the mechanism by which the dorsal determinant(s) is translocated asymmetrically to establish the dorsoventral axis? What is the precise function of the microtubule linker protein Syntabulin in this process? Key to the asymmetric translocation of the dorsal determinant(s) is the establishment of the parallel microtubule array at the vegetal pole of the egg following fertilization (52, 81). How is this parallel array established, and how is its orientation determined? In Xenopus, the position of the sperm entry point and sperm aster determine the orientation of the vegetal microtubule array required for dorsal determinant translocation (132a). In zebrafish, the sperm enters the egg through the single animally localized micropyle (39a), and it is not known if sperm aster positioning plays a role in orienting the vegetal microtubule array like in Xenopus. Several maternally supplied transcription factors have now been identified that regulate the expression of a number of zygotic genes acting in ventral cell fate specification. Runx2bt2, Pou2, and Kzp are required for the initiation or maintenance of vox/vent/ved, bmp2b and bmp7a, and wnt8, respectively. What additional factors function with these to regulate gene expression, and do gene regulatory networks exist? Few studies have addressed the posttranscriptional and posttranslational regulation of protein production and degradation. Because zebrafish embryos develop rapidly, a mechanism to rapidly turn over proteins could be essential. Identification of Lnx2b as a regulator of Bozozok protein degradation suggests that such mechanisms may regulate the levels of other proteins functioning in dorsoventral patterning. The BMP signaling gradient that patterns dorsoventral tissues in zebrafish functions www.annualreviews.org • Zebrafish Dorsoventral Patterning 369 ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 exclusively via Bmp2b-Bmp7a heterodimer signaling. Why is it that only BMP heterodimers signal in this process? Do BMP antagonists preferentially bind BMP homodimers leaving BMP heterodimers to do the signaling? Do BMP heterodimers bind with higher affinity to the heteromeric BMP receptors than BMP homodimers? Alternatively, does another extracellular modulator facilitate the delivery of BMP heterodimers to its receptors or abrogate the delivery of BMP homodimers? Further studies are required to elucidate the mechanism of BMP heterodimer signaling. Most studies have focused on fixed developmental stages and thus do not readily account for the coordination of patterning and signaling systems in time and space during development. Recent studies suggest that patterning of the dorsoventral and anteroposterior axes is coordinated in a temporally progressive manner from anterior to posterior (128). Is patterning of the dorsoventral and anteroposterior axes coordinated as suggested or does each function by distinct temporal mechanisms? If they are temporally coordinated, what is the mechanism? Is there a competence factor that Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. GE45CH16-Mullins allows progressively more posterior tissues to be patterned by both the dorsoventral and anteroposterior patterning mechanisms? Is there an inhibitory factor that must be repressed in progressively more posterior tissues to allow dorsoventral and anteroposterior tissues to be patterned? Do the anteroposterior axis signaling pathways, Wnt, FGF, and Retinoic acid signaling, act on the dorsoventral patterning mechanism to modulate its function and coordinate the patterning of these two axes? Many extracellular factors have now been identified that modulate the BMP signaling gradient. However, how these factors function together in a spatiotemporal manner to generate the gradient is not understood. Mathematical modeling may be valuable at this point to generate testable hypotheses of the extracellular modulation of BMP signaling and gradient formation. Interpretation of the gradient also has yet to be elucidated. How does the phospho-Smad1/5 gradient ultimately generate distinct cell types? And how do distinct phospho-Smad1/5 levels elicit distinct expression domains? These and many other questions remain to be elucidated. SUMMARY POINTS 1. Studies of maternal-effect mutants have led to the identification of several previously unknown maternal factors that function in establishing the dorsoventral axis or the animalvegetal axis via regulation of the Balbiani body. 2. Maternal factors actively promote both dorsal and ventral cell fate specification in embryonic dorsoventral axis formation. 3. A protein degradation mechanism, as well as positive and negative transcriptional regulation, including autoregulatory loops restrict organizer gene expression to the dorsal-most regions and maintain ventral-specific gene expression. 4. Multiple levels of extracellular modulation generate a robust BMP signaling gradient that acts as a morphogen to establish distinct cellular fates along the dorsoventral axis. 5. BMP heterodimers acting through a heteromeric type I receptor complex signal exclusively in dorsoventral patterning. 6. BMP signaling acts in a temporally progressive manner along the anteroposterior axis to pattern dorsoventral tissues. 370 Langdon · Mullins GE45CH16-Mullins ARI 30 September 2011 20:47 FUTURE ISSUES 1. Identify the dorsal determinant(s) that is asymmetrically translocated shortly after fertilization and during the cleavage stage. 2. Determine the mechanism that generates and orients the parallel microtubule array at the vegetal pole and the mechanism by which it translocates the dorsal determinant(s). 3. Understand the role of protein degradation in dorsoventral embryonic axial patterning. 4. Determine the mechanism that restricts signaling to BMP heterodimers in dorsoventral patterning. Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. 5. Understand how the BMP morphogen gradient is interpreted by cells to establish the distinct dorsoventral cell fates of the embryo. 6. Determine the mechanism by which dorsoventral cell fates are specified in a temporally progressive manner along the anteroposterior axis. 7. Determine how the multitudes of extracellular modulators of BMP signaling function in space and time to generate the robust BMP signaling gradient. DISCLOSURE STATEMENT The authors are not aware of any affiliations, memberships, funding, or financial holdings that might be perceived as affecting the objectivity of this review. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We would like to thank James Dutko, Elliott Abrams, Megumi Hashiguchi, and Lee Kapp for comments and careful reading of this manuscript. We would also like to acknowledge grants from the National Institutes of Health R01- GM56326, The MORE Division of NIH, and Penn-PORT Program for support. LITERATURE CITED 1. Abrams EW, Mullins MC. 2009. Early zebrafish development: It’s in the maternal genes. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 19:396–403 2. Aono A, Hazama M, Notoya K, Taketomi S, Yamasaki H, et al. 1995. 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Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. Comparative Genetics and Genomics of Nematodes: Genome Structure, Development, and Lifestyle Ralf J. Sommer and Adrian Streit p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 1 Uncovering the Mystery of Gliding Motility in the Myxobacteria Beiyan Nan and David R. Zusman p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p21 Genetics and Control of Tomato Fruit Ripening and Quality Attributes Harry J. Klee and James J. Giovannoni p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p41 Toxin-Antitoxin Systems in Bacteria and Archaea Yoshihiro Yamaguchi, Jung-Ho Park, and Masayori Inouye p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p61 Genetic and Epigenetic Networks in Intellectual Disabilities Hans van Bokhoven p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p81 Axis Formation in Hydra Hans Bode p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 105 The Rules of Engagement in the Legume-Rhizobial Symbiosis Giles E.D. Oldroyd, Jeremy D. Murray, Philip S. Poole, and J. Allan Downie p p p p p p p p 119 A Genetic Approach to the Transcriptional Regulation of Hox Gene Clusters Patrick Tschopp and Denis Duboule p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 145 V(D)J Recombination: Mechanisms of Initiation David G. Schatz and Patrick C. Swanson p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 167 Human Copy Number Variation and Complex Genetic Disease Santhosh Girirajan, Catarina D. Campbell, and Evan E. Eichler p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 203 DNA Elimination in Ciliates: Transposon Domestication and Genome Surveillance Douglas L. Chalker and Meng-Chao Yao p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 227 Double-Strand Break End Resection and Repair Pathway Choice Lorraine S. Symington and Jean Gautier p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 247 vi GE45-FrontMatter ARI 11 October 2011 19:52 CRISPR-Cas Systems in Bacteria and Archaea: Versatile Small RNAs for Adaptive Defense and Regulation Devaki Bhaya, Michelle Davison, and Rodolphe Barrangou p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 273 Human Mitochondrial tRNAs: Biogenesis, Function, Structural Aspects, and Diseases Tsutomu Suzuki, Asuteka Nagao, and Takeo Suzuki p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 299 The Genetics of Hybrid Incompatibilities Shamoni Maheshwari and Daniel A. Barbash p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 331 Annu. Rev. Genet. 2011.45:357-377. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.org by Reed College on 07/26/13. For personal use only. Maternal and Zygotic Control of Zebrafish Dorsoventral Axial Patterning Yvette G. Langdon and Mary C. Mullins p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 357 Genomic Imprinting: A Mammalian Epigenetic Discovery Model Denise P. Barlow p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 379 Sex in Fungi Min Ni, Marianna Feretzaki, Sheng Sun, Xuying Wang, and Joseph Heitman p p p p p p 405 Genomic Analysis at the Single-Cell Level Tomer Kalisky, Paul Blainey, and Stephen R. Quake p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 431 Uniting Germline and Stem Cells: The Function of Piwi Proteins and the piRNA Pathway in Diverse Organisms Celina Juliano, Jianquan Wang, and Haifan Lin p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p 447 Errata An online log of corrections to Annual Review of Genetics articles may be found at http:// genet.annualreviews.org/errata.shtml Contents vii