TY - CHAP
T1 - Maternal contributions to gastrulation in zebrafish
AU - Solnica-Krezel, Lilianna
N1 - Funding Information:
I would like to thank the volume editor, Florence Marlow, and Linwei Li for their constructive comments on the manuscript, as well as Linwei Li and Isa Roszko for contributing figures. I am also grateful to Elizabeth Busch-Nentwich and Richard White for discussions and sharing unpublished data. The work on gastrulation in my laboratory is supported in part by the grant R35 GM118179 from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Gastrulation is a critical early morphogenetic process of animal development, during which the three germ layers; mesoderm, endoderm and ectoderm, are rearranged by internalization movements. Concurrent epiboly movements spread and thin the germ layers while convergence and extension movements shape them into an anteroposteriorly elongated body with head, trunk, tail and organ rudiments. In zebrafish, gastrulation follows the proliferative and inductive events that establish the embryonic and extraembryonic tissues and the embryonic axis. Specification of these tissues and embryonic axes are controlled by the maternal gene products deposited in the egg. These early maternally controlled processes need to generate sufficient cell numbers and establish the embryonic polarity to ensure normal gastrulation. Subsequently, after activation of the zygotic genome, the zygotic gene products govern mesoderm and endoderm induction and germ layer patterning. Gastrulation is initiated during the maternal-to-zygotic transition, a process that entails both activation of the zygotic genome and downregulation of the maternal transcripts. Genomic studies indicate that gastrulation is largely controlled by the zygotic genome. Nonetheless, genetic studies that investigate the relative contributions of maternal and zygotic gene function by comparing zygotic, maternal and maternal zygotic mutant phenotypes, reveal significant contribution of maternal gene products, transcripts and/or proteins, that persist through gastrulation, to the control of gastrulation movements. Therefore, in zebrafish, the maternally expressed gene products not only set the stage for, but they also actively participate in gastrulation morphogenesis.
AB - Gastrulation is a critical early morphogenetic process of animal development, during which the three germ layers; mesoderm, endoderm and ectoderm, are rearranged by internalization movements. Concurrent epiboly movements spread and thin the germ layers while convergence and extension movements shape them into an anteroposteriorly elongated body with head, trunk, tail and organ rudiments. In zebrafish, gastrulation follows the proliferative and inductive events that establish the embryonic and extraembryonic tissues and the embryonic axis. Specification of these tissues and embryonic axes are controlled by the maternal gene products deposited in the egg. These early maternally controlled processes need to generate sufficient cell numbers and establish the embryonic polarity to ensure normal gastrulation. Subsequently, after activation of the zygotic genome, the zygotic gene products govern mesoderm and endoderm induction and germ layer patterning. Gastrulation is initiated during the maternal-to-zygotic transition, a process that entails both activation of the zygotic genome and downregulation of the maternal transcripts. Genomic studies indicate that gastrulation is largely controlled by the zygotic genome. Nonetheless, genetic studies that investigate the relative contributions of maternal and zygotic gene function by comparing zygotic, maternal and maternal zygotic mutant phenotypes, reveal significant contribution of maternal gene products, transcripts and/or proteins, that persist through gastrulation, to the control of gastrulation movements. Therefore, in zebrafish, the maternally expressed gene products not only set the stage for, but they also actively participate in gastrulation morphogenesis.
KW - Convergence
KW - Epiboly
KW - Extension
KW - Genetic screens
KW - Germ layers
KW - Internalization
KW - Maternal-to-zygotic transition
KW - Morphogenesis
KW - Zygotic genome activation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85086046664&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/bs.ctdb.2020.05.001
DO - 10.1016/bs.ctdb.2020.05.001
M3 - Chapter
C2 - 32591082
AN - SCOPUS:85086046664
SN - 9780128152201
T3 - Current Topics in Developmental Biology
SP - 391
EP - 427
BT - Maternal Effect Genes in Development
A2 - Marlow, Florence L.
PB - Academic Press Inc.
ER -