Imaging the First Moments of a Body Plan Emerging in the Embryo

Contact: Diana Kenney dkenney@mbl.edu; 508-685-3525聽

Egg cells start out as round blobs. After fertilization, they begin transforming into people, dogs, fish, or other animals by orienting head to tail, back to belly, and left to right. Exactly what sets these body orientation directions has been guessed at but not seen. Now researchers at the Marine Biological Laboratory (美女直播做爱) have imaged the very beginning of this cellular rearrangement, and their findings help answer a fundamental question.

鈥淭he most interesting and mysterious part of developmental biology is the origin of the body axis in animals,鈥 said researcher Tomomi Tani. An MBLscientist in the聽Eugene Bell Center聽at the time of the research, Tani is now with Japan鈥檚 National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology.

The work by Tani and Hirokazu Ishii, reported this week in聽,聽shows that both parents contribute to the body orientation of their offspring. For the animal species studied in the research (sea squirts), input from the mother sets the back-belly axis while that of the father does so for the head-tail axis.

鈥淏oth the maternal and the paternal cues are required to establish the body plan of the developing animal embryo,鈥 stated Tani.

This research addresses fundamental questions in developmental biology and may also provide clues as to why things sometimes go wrong. Such knowledge could benefit fields as diverse as medicine and agriculture.

Left: Propagation of calcium ion waves in fertilized Ciona egg. (Selective Plane Illumination Microscopy [SPIM] movie showing fluorescence of calcium ion indicator, Rhod-dextran). Right: Autofluorescence image of the same egg to show the cytoplasmic movement. Each frame was taken every 2s. Replay speed, 10 frames/s. Credit: Hiro Ishii and Tomomi Tani.

The prevalent theory of how the body axis is set has been that actin filaments inside the egg, which are involved in cell motion and contraction, power the rearrangement of cytoplasmic material in the egg after it has been fertilized. But seeing this happen has been a challenge because the onset of the process takes place rapidly and over very small distances within living cells.

To overcome these hurdles, Tani and Ishii used a聽fluorescence polarization microscope, a technology developed a few years ago at MBLby Tani,聽聽(now at Chan Zuckerberg Biohub) and MBLSenior Scientist聽Rudolf Oldenbourg, along with scientists at other institutions. This technology makes it possible to image events taking place at distances measured in nanometers, or thousands of times smaller than the diameter of a human hair. The methodology is also a familiar one to Tani and others.

鈥淯sing polarized light for looking at dynamics of molecular order is a tradition of MBLimaging,鈥 Tani noted, one that began with pioneering live-cell studies by Shinya Inou茅 in the 1950s.

When polarized, light waves oscillate either partially or completely in only one direction: up/down, left/right, clockwise/counterclockwise, and so on. That鈥檚 why a filter will let polarized light through in one orientation, but block it when rotated.

Tani and Ishii attached fluorescent probe molecules, which glow when illuminated with the right light, to the actin in eggs of sea squirts (Ciona), a marine species often studied by researchers as a model for animal development. The probe-actin link was very rigid, Tani said, allowing the microscope to detect the orientation of the actin molecules by working with polarized light.

Left: Ciona egg before and after fertilization (Movie of Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Microscopy [TIRFM] images; F-actin probe is AF488-phalloidin). Right: Transient changes of F-actin alignments from the time before fertilization to the first cell division of Ciona egg. Positions of AF488-phalloidin particles bound to F-actin are shown as yellow dots, and the orientation of F-actin is shown as yellow bars. Frame intervals, 10s. Replay speed, 15 frames/s. Credit: Hiro Ishii and Tomomi Tani

So, if the actin all pointed in one orientation, the researchers spotted it. If the actin was jumbled, they could see that too. When Tani and Ishii looked at unfertilized eggs, they saw a mostly random arrangement of actin. After fertilization, a calcium ion wave passed through the egg and the actin filaments lined up and contracted along the orientation that was at a right, or 90o, angle to the future back/belly axis. The cytoplasm then moved. This body plan formation process began just after fertilization.

The fertilized egg orientation research is being followed up with other investigations. One of the long-term goals of such imaging is to detect and understand the force in the developing embryo that shape its morphology, its form and structure.

鈥淲e hope that the molecular orders in the cytoskeleton tell us something like 鈥榝ield lines鈥 of mechanical forces that organize the morphology of multicellular organisms,鈥 Tani said in discussing future efforts.

Citation:聽Hirokazu Ishii and Tomomi Tani (2021) Dynamic organization of cortical actin filaments during the ooplasmic segregation of ascidian聽Ciona听别驳驳蝉.听Mol. Biol. Cell, DOI:聽

Homepage photo:聽Screen capture from Movie 1. Left: Propagation of calcium ion waves in fertilized聽颁颈辞苍补听egg. Right: Autofluorescence image of the same egg to show the cytoplasmic movement. Credit: Hiro Ishii and Tomomi Tani

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罢丑别听Marine Biological Laboratory聽(美女直播做爱) is dedicated to scientific discovery 鈥 exploring fundamental biology, understanding marine biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the MBLis a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the聽.

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