Groupe Danio, U 368 INSERM, Ecole Normale Supérieure, 46, rue d Ulm, F-75230 Paris Cedex 05, France
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: rosa{at}wotan.ens.fr)
Accepted July 20, 2001
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Endoderm, Nodal, Fate determination, Gastrulation, casanova, Heart, Zebrafish
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INTRODUCTION |
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The mechanisms involved in the control of endodermal fate and behaviour are only partially understood. Endoderm specification has been mainly analysed in Xenopus in which a two-step model was proposed (Dale, 1999; Yasuo and Lemaire, 1999). Maternal factors located in vegetal blastomeres, such as VegT, would activate the zygotic expression of both early endodermal transcription factor and TGFß-related molecules such as Nodal related 1 or 2 and Derrière. In a second step, these zygotically expressed TGFß-related genes would relay VegT in activating endodermal genes. In zebrafish, genetic studies have led to a model of endoderm specification that shares several zygotic steps with the Xenopus model (Alexander and Stainier, 1999). Embryos mutant for Nodal-related genes cyclops (cyc) and squint (sqt), or lacking both maternal and zygotic Nodal cofactor OEP (Gritsman et al., 2000), form essentially no endoderm or mesoderm (Feldman et al., 1998; Rebagliati et al., 1998). Conversely, activation of the Nodal /activin pathway by Tar*, an activated version of the type I TGFß-related receptor, Taram-A (Tar) (Renucci et al., 1996) which is normally expressed in a region encompassing endodermal progenitors, drives blastomeres to an endodermal fate and rescues endoderm formation in oep mutants (Bally-Cuif et al., 2000; Peyrieras et al., 1998). This suggests that the activation of the Nodal/Tar pathway directly induces endoderm formation, but it is not clear whether other signals are also required.
Transcription factors like the Mix-type homeobox protein Bon (bonnie and clyde), and Fau/Gata5 (faust) have been implicated downstream of Nodal-related signals. Both are induced by Nodal-related molecules, and the number of endodermal cells is reduced in the bon and fau mutants (Alexander and Stainier, 1999; Kikuchi et al., 2000; Reiter et al., 2001). Endoderm formation also requires Cas (casanova), a Sox-related factor (Alexander et al., 1999; Dickmeis et al., 2001; Kikuchi et al., 2001). Epistatic studies have shown that cas functions downstream of cyc, sqt, oep, bon and fau. In particular, cas embryos are not able to respond to Nodal signalling, whether activated by Nodal-related ligands or by expression of Tar*. Finally, a model for endoderm specification has been assembled, based on these results: Nodal-related proteins induce the expression of transcription factors like Bon, Fau/Gata5 that allow the expression of cas. In turn, Cas initiates, in an instructive manner, the expression of endodermal genes such as sox17 (Reiter et al., 2001) and down-regulates mesodermal genes [(Dickmeis et al., 2001; Kikuchi et al., 2001) and our own unpublished data].
Although the molecular mechanisms implicated in endoderm specification start to be unravelled, very little is known about the signals and molecules required for the determination/commitment of a cell to an endodermal fate. Determination/commitment of a cell or a group of cells is defined by the acquisition of a fate that cannot be modified by transplantation into a new embryonic environment (Spemann, 1938). Cell transplantation experiments in Xenopus have shown that commitment to the endoderm germ layer occurs at the early gastrula stage (Heasman et al., 1984; Wylie et al., 1987). However, this point has not been addressed in zebrafish, and the signals controlling this commitment remain unidentified in either model. In particular, it is not clear whether signals able to specify endoderm, such as Nodals, also participate in the determination process.
Endoderm cells undergo an extensive migration period which is critical for the establishment of the endoderm germ layer and probably its later patterning, since cells can receive extrinsic patterning cues depending on their environment (Grapin-Botton and Melton, 2000; Joubin and Stern, 1999). It is thus important to understand what controls the induction of the behaviour of endoderm cells during gastrulation, what drives their segregation from the other cells of the embryo and whether this segregation requires that endoderm cells be present at the margin of the embryo. The capacity to specifically orient the early blastomeres into the endoderm pathway should help clarify this issue.
In this study, using cell transplantation experiments, we have first defined the timing for endoderm commitment and the properties of committed cells. We show that endoderm-fated cells reach a committed state at the onset of gastrulation and that animal pole blastula cells, normally fated to neuroectoderm (Kimmel et al., 1990), when transplanted to the margin can adopt an endodermal fate, indicating that marginal signals, potentially Nodals, are sufficient to induce the endodermal program. We have tested the implication of Nodal signals in these processes and found that cells in which the Nodal pathway is activated by Tar* (which for the sake of clarity, will simply be called Tar*-activated cells or activated cells throughout this article) adopt an endodermal identity even when grafted to the animal pole. Furthermore both endoderm-committed cells and activated cells translocate to the YSL surface when transplanted into any position of the blastoderm, demonstrating that once committed, endoderm cells can segregate from other cell types and that this behaviour can be induced by activation of Nodal signalling. Then Nodal/Tar*-activated cells systematically join endogenous endodermal derivatives during gastrulation and differentiate according to their anteroposterior position. Thus, once activation of Nodal signalling is initiated, cells are committed both to an endodermal fate and behaviour. This commitment does not rely on a community effect between Tar*-activated cells and endoderm identity does not require the presence of the YSL during gastrulation. It also appears independent of endogenous endoderm since wild-type cells expressing Tar* can restore endodermal derivatives in a mutant deprived of endoderm such as cas. Taking advantage of this last result, we have analysed the origin of the cardia bifida in this mutant, a heart condition resulting from the absence of fusion of the primordial heart tubes, often attributed to an absent or defective endoderm (Narita et al., 1997; Peyrieras et al., 1998). Cardia bifida can be rescued by introduction of wild-type endoderm into cas embryos, thus demonstrating that cas activity is not required within heart precursors and strengthening the notion that endoderm is a key element controlling normal heart morphogenesis.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Grafting experiments
Donor embryos at the 2/4-cell stage were injected in one blastomere with 80 pg of GFP + 120 pg of nls-lacZ mRNAs used as lineage tracers, either alone or combined with 1.2 pg of Tar* mRNA. At the sphere stage, 5-20 donor (green) cells were grafted to the margin or to the animal pole of host embryos (Ho and Kimmel, 1993). Embryos were then cultured in embryo medium (Westerfield, 1995) with 10 U/ml penicillin and 10 µg/ml streptomycin. The dorsoventral position of grafts was evaluated by the shield stage. For single cell transplantations, donor embryos, once injected, were cultured in calcium-free Ringer medium. At the sphere stage, cells were mechanically dissociated and isolated cells were transplanted.
In determination experiments, embryos were injected with the activatable dye DMNB-FD, which was activated at the 30-40% epiboly stage (Bally-Cuif et al., 2000; Serbedzija et al., 1998) in a few cells and used as a source of cells for transplantation. This procedure allowed us to test the evolution in time of the properties of cells originating from the same region of the fate map.
Animal caps culture
Once cells had been grafted to the animal pole, embryos were placed in MMR medium (Kimelman and Maas, 1992). Animal caps were dissected with forceps and cultured in L15 (65%) (Gibco), embryo medium (20%), BSA (1 mg/ml), Hepes (pH7.5 10 mM), penicillin, streptomycin and H2O. They were fixed when control embryos had reached 90% epiboly.
Phenotypic analyses
In situ hybridisation and immunohistochemistry were done following standard protocols (Hauptmann and Gerster, 1994). Probes used were: foxA2 (Strahle et al., 1993), fkd7 (Odenthal and Nusslein-Volhard, 1998), gata5 (Rodaway et al., 1999), her5 (Muller et al., 1996), insulin (Argenton et al., 1999), nkx2.3 (Lee et al., 1996), nkx 2.5 (Lee et al., 1996), sox17 (Alexander and Stainier, 1999). For the immunodetection of ß-galactosidase, rabbit polyclonal antibodies (Cappel) were used at 1:1000 dilution. Sectioning of whole-mount stained embryos was performed with JB4 embedding resin (Polysciences).
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RESULTS |
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Commitment, here assessed by transplantation to the animal pole, could however result from a late event, like the recruitment of transplanted cells by the endogenous endoderm reaching the animal pole. To rule out this possibility, we checked that, when grafted to the animal pole, Tar*-activated cells as well as non-activated endoderm-committed blastomeres (ECB; Fig. 3A) adopted an endodermal identity before the migration of the endogenous endoderm to the animal pole. To this aim, we analysed the expression of the early endodermal markers sox17, her5, gata5 and foxA2 in the young gastrulae (60% epiboly) harbouring grafted cells. ECB and Tar*-activated cells, but not control cells, grafted to the animal pole expressed these genes (sox17 76%, n=59; her5 87%, n=8; gata5 43%, n=7; foxA2 100%, n=8 for activated cells) (Fig. 3B-D; data not shown), thus demonstrating that endodermal specification was already initiated in Tar*-activated cells by the beginning of gastrulation, and that the endodermal fate acquired by transplanted cells did not result from a late recruitment by the endogenous endoderm. Within individual embryos, some grafted cells did not express the tested gene, a situation that can be easily explained because endoderm markers do not label the mesendodermal hatching gland precursors, which are also induced by activation of Nodal/Tar signalling. Taken together, our results show that the endodermal program followed by Nodal/Tar*-activated cells is similar to that of endogenous endoderm but does not depend on additional signals released by the margin of the embryo.
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During gastrulation, activated and endoderm committed cells reach the surface of the YSL
Fate determination concerns both cellular identity and location within the embryo. Previous results have shown that, even when grafted to the animal pole, activated cells or endoderm-committed blastomeres (ECB) develop as endogenous endodermal derivatives in 24 hpf embryos (Fig. 1 and Fig. 2). This implies that, during development, activated cells/ECB leave the epiblast and reach the YSL. In vivo, this situation occurs at the margin of the embryo where cells involute to form the hypoblast. Do activated cells/ECB, when grafted to the animal pole, need to involute through the margin? To address this issue, we followed their behaviour by time-lapse analysis. Until the onset of gastrulation, both activated/ECB and control cells stayed epiblastic (Fig. 5A,B,E,F,I). During gastrulation, while control cells kept motionless (Fig. 5C), activated cells/ECB left their epiblastic location to reach the surface of the YSL, without coming to the margin of the blastoderm (Fig. 5G,J). There, in contrast to control cells (Fig. 5D), they acquired a flat morphology and developed filopodia (Fig. 4H), thereby adopting a location and a morphology typical of endodermal cells (Warga and Nusslein-Volhard, 1999). Thus activated cells/ECB are translocated to the hypoblast without the need to involute through the margin.
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DISCUSSION |
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Nodal/Tar signals may modify directly the fate of the activated cells in either an autonomous or non-autonomous fashion. The graft of a group of activated cells or activated single cells demonstrates unambiguously that the process is indeed autonomous: activated cells express endoderm markers when grafted to an ectopic site and further differentiate into endodermal derivatives. In addition, activated cells either isolated or in groups cannot induce endodermal markers in neighbouring cells. The requirements for the establishment of this endodermal identity was examined in detail. The requirement for the YSL in the identity of Nodal/Tar-activated cells was first investigated, since this syncitium has an endoderm-inducing activity, expresses Nodal-related genes transiently and is the major substratum for the migration of endoderm cells. We have shown, by grafting endoderm-committed blastomeres or Tar*-expressing cells into the animal region of host embryos and dissecting the animal caps, that the YSL is not required to maintain the endodermal identity of these cells during gastrulation. Consistent with this result, whole blastoderms separated from the YSL can maintain the expression of endodermal markers (T. Aoki and F. Rosa, unpublished data). Thus the YSL may release, at an early stage, endoderm inducing factors, likely related to the Nodals, but does not appear necessary during gastrulation for maintaining endoderm identity. Likewise, the requirement for endogenous endoderm was also analysed by grafting activated wild-type cells into cas embryos, which are devoid of endoderm. Activated cells expressed endoderm markers at gastrulation and differentiated into endoderm at later stages. We have carried out similar experiments using oep mutant hosts, which are also deficient in endoderm, and obtained similar results (J. Mathieu and F. M. R., unpublished). Thus endogenous endoderm is not required for Nodal/Tar-activated cells to keep their identity and to differentiate into endoderm. This is in contrast to recent experiments carried out in Xenopus (Clements and Woodland, 2000), which show that sox17-expressing cells adopt an endodermal identity, even when originating from an ectodermal region, but later die if they cannot join the resident endoderm population. This difference in late behaviour may either stem from a developmental difference between Xenopus and zebrafish or may suggest that the activation of the entire Nodal/Tar pathway provides necessary cues, which are not provided by the activation of the downstream pathway mediated by Sox17. Whatever the origin of this difference, our results clearly demonstrate that the induction of endoderm by activation of the Nodal/Tar pathway is largely autonomous.
Activation of Nodal signalling triggers the specific translocation of blastomeres to the surface of the YSL
Endoderm progenitors form at the margin of the embryo under the influence of Nodal-related signals. Very soon after their fate can be established, endoderm progenitors sink into the depth of the blastoderm to reach the surface of the YSL, on which they actively migrate during gastrulation. It was not clear whether endoderm cells need to be close to the margin to achieve these translocation movements. It is not established either whether the marginal YSL has specific properties as compared to the animal pole YSL, which allow the proper recognition by endoderm cells. By transplanting endoderm-fated activated cells or ECB to the animal pole of zebrafish blastulae, we have observed that, soon after the onset of gastrulation, these transplanted cells reach the YSL. Furthermore, they do not require involution through the margin of the embryo to reach the YSL. These results, which were also observed when grafting at any position of the host embryo, clearly demonstrate first that the animal pole and marginal YSL represent equal targets for the translocation of endoderm cells, although we cannot exclude that endoderm cells translocate faster at the margin than at the animal pole. Second, they show that once activated, cells can directly reach their target site, without the need for specific cues provided by the margin of the embryo. Nodal-related signals have also been reported to control the segregation between mesoderm and ectoderm, thus Nodal signals may play a general role in controlling cell position in the gastrula (Wacker et al., 2000).
Analysis of the behaviour of activated cells clearly raises two issues. First we need to understand how they can sort from their neighbours and second how they direct their movement to the YSL. One possibility is that activated cells express a range of adhesive/repulsive molecules that identify them as endodermal. In this case, they would be progressively expelled from the animal pole to become interspersed within the endodermal cells. This sorting-out process (Townes and Holtfreter, 1955) had been proposed by Ho to explain the exclusion of hypoblastic cells from the epiblast (Ho, 1993) and was more recently suggested to explain the behaviour of Xsox17-expressing blastomeres in Xenopus (Clements and Woodland, 2000). Such a sorting-out process, if involved, does not rely on the presence of endoderm, since activated cells translocate to the YSL in a cas environment. Alternatively, specific translocation to the YSL may result from a high mobility of activated cells or from guidance cues provided by the environment and/or the YSL. The delineation of this process is currently under investigation in our laboratory. In any case, the properties of activated cells, combined with the use of mutants, should greatly facilitate a better understanding of the cellular and molecular processes controlling cell movements during gastrulation, a major open question.
Activated cells give rise to correctly patterned endodermal derivatives
In 24 hpf embryos, activated cells grafted to the margin of the blastoderm are found in AP positions consistent with the fate map established at the beginning of gastrulation, indicating that, during gastrulation, they behave like endogenous endoderm. Furthermore, when transplanted into either wild-type or cas recipient embryos, they correctly express regionalized endodermal markers such as nkx2.3, fkd7 or insulin. In particular, no marked ectopic expression of these genes has been observed. Thus, endodermal tissues derived from activated cells seem to be correctly patterned along the anteroposterior axis. This AP pattern may be established in different non-exclusive ways. One possibility is that endoderm obtains its regional identity via an autonomous program, without regard to adjacent germ layers. For instance, subsets of endoderm cells could be predetermined, at the onset of gastrulation, to migrate up to the animal pole or to remain next to the margin and to differentiate accordingly. Predetermination appears highly unlikely since activated cells, although they can give rise to posterior endodermal derivatives when grafted to the margin, do not when grafted to the animal pole. A second possibility is that the AP identity of endodermal cells could be defined as a consequence of the length or duration of migration during gastrulation. This can also be ruled out because cells grafted to the animal pole do not have to undergo extensive migration and still differentiate according to their AP position. The third, most likely, possibility is that cell-to-cell interactions provide positional information for the endoderm. One good example in this respect is the regulation, in the prospective anterior endoderm, of the gene her5, which involves both positive and negative extracellular signals (Bally-Cuif et al., 2000). One possibility is that endoderm is submitted to self-patterning by the release of planar signals emanating from a specific region of the endoderm germ layer. Here we show that the small fragments of endoderm restored in cas mutants, otherwise deficient of endoderm, are normally patterned. It thus seems unlikely that they acquired their AP identity through patterning signals solely emitted by the endoderm. Rather, patterning signals are most likely provided by the environment of endoderm cells, irrespective of the germ layer considered. In agreement with this idea, recent results established in Xenopus have shown that endoderm retains its AP identity when grafted along with its mesodermal and ectodermal sheath, but does not when grafted alone (Zeynali et al., 2000). Likewise, in mice, in vitro explant assays have shown that adjacent germ layers provide diffusible signals that induce organ-specific gene expression in endoderm. In particular, FGF4 could act as a morphogen for posterior endoderm since it induces different markers in a dose-dependent manner (Wells and Melton, 2000). These in vitro approaches, as well as our own studies on the regulation of the her5 gene have opened the way to a better understanding of endoderm patterning. In this context, the use of Nodal/Tar-activated cells should prove a very useful tool in understanding the mechanisms controlling this crucial patterning process.
A role for endoderm in heart morphogenesis
Endoderm is thought to play an essential role in the control of organogenesis. Our work has provided the opportunity to examine the specific function of endoderm in the organogenesis of the heart. In addition to the absence of endoderm, cas embryos exhibit an abnormal morphogenesis of the heart, leading to cardia bifida. By introducing wild-type endoderm into cas embryos, normal heart morphogenesis can be rescued, providing direct evidence that the cardia bifida is not due to the absence of cas activity in heart precursors, but more likely in surrounding tissues. In addition, both the lack of endoderm in cas embryos and the restoration of heart morphogenesis by introduction of wild-type endoderm strongly support a role for endoderm itself in mediating cardiac fusion. This interpretation is consistent with previous reports, including ours. Quails with abnormal endodermal apoptosis display a severe cardiac phenotype sometimes leading to cardia bifida. This phenotype can be rescued by grafting wild-type anterior endoderm (Ghatpande et al., 2000). Several mutants, including Gata4 in the mouse and fau, bon and oep in zebrafish, exhibiting cardia bifida, have an associated defective endodermal tissue. Chimera analysis have shown that expression of gata4 restricted to endoderm is sufficient to rescue heart formation (Narita et al., 1997). In studying the cardia bifida exhibited by zebrafish oep mutants, we have shown that the rescue of endoderm tissue in these mutants results in the non-autonomous fusion of the hemicardia (Peyrieras et al., 1998). Taken together these results support a major role for endoderm in heart hemicardia fusion. Although this role could be indirect, the immediate proximity of pharyngeal endoderm and the heart precursors suggests that close interactions between the two tissues allow proper migration of the hemicardia to the midline and subsequent fusion to generate a functional heart. One possibility is that endoderm provides a simple substratum for migration of hemicardia to the midline under the influence of non endodermal cues. Another possibility is that endoderm provides both a substratum and directional cues. A third possibility is that heart hemicardia undergo passive migration toward the midline, carried by the extensive migration of pharyngeal endoderm below the head (Peyrieras et al., 1998), a phenomenon we also observe when grafting Tar*-activated cells. We clearly cannot choose between these possibilities but we notice that, in weak alleles of fau, pharyngeal endoderm is present but exhibits defective convergence, a phenomenon supporting the third possibility. In conclusion, our results clearly show that grafts of wild-type activated cells into mutants devoid of endoderm is a powerful tool for understanding the organising and/or inducing activities of endoderm during development.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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