1 Department of Biology, Okayama University, Okayama 700-8530, Japan
2 Evolutionary Morphology Research Team, Center for Developmental Biology (CDB), RIKEN, Kobe, Japan
3 Department of Zoology, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan
4 Department of Medical Technology School of Health Sciences Faculty of Medicine, Niigata University, Niigata 951-8518, Japan
* These authors contributed equally to this work
Author for correspondence (e-mail: bothrops{at}cc.okayama-u.ac.jp)
Accepted June 22, 2001
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Pax6, Lamprey, Embryo, Neuromeres, Forebrain
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INTRODUCTION |
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Pax6 homologs are also expressed in the olfactory receptors and in parts of the central nervous system (CNS) in most of the animal groups studied so far, including the flatworms, roundworms, nemerteans, mollusks, arthropods, echinoderms and chordates) (Callaerts et al., 1997; Glardon et al., 1998). In the head surface ectoderm of jawed vertebrates (gnathostomes), Pax6 expression is restricted to the olfactory placode, the eye placode and the anterior hypophysis (Walther and Gruss, 1991), indicating its function in the establishment of these cell types. Expression of Pax6 in the CNS is restricted to the telencephalon, the diencephalon and the myelencephalon, the regions that constitute the developmental compartments of the brain. The gnathostome neural tube is assumed to consist of a series of segmental bulges or neuromeres along its anteroposterior axis, and those in the forebrain are specifically called prosomeres (Rubenstein et al., 1998). Expression of the Pax6 gene is regarded as a marker for some of the prosomeres and also for the forebrain alar plate (Stoykova et al., 1996).
Prosomeres have so far been observed in many gnathostomes, including teleosts (Wullimann and Puelles, 1999; Diaz-Regueira and Anadon, 2000), chicken (Redies et al., 2000), frog (Javier-Milan and Puelles, 2000) and mouse (Puelles and Rubenstein, 1993; Shimamura et al., 1995). As no neuromeric patterns are apparent in the amphioxus, the development of the CNS in the lamprey, the sister group of the gnathostomes, is a crucial issue. Recent immunohistochemical analysis has implied that six prosomeres are identifiable in the adult lamprey, as in the amniotes (Pombal and Puelles, 1999; Pombal et al., 2001). The morphological pattern of the larval lamprey brain has also been described subsequent to the classical analyses of Bergquist, in which five prosomeres were counted (Bergquist and Källén, 1953). The relationship between the latter segments and the prosomeres has not been clarified. The development of the prosomeres is even more enigmatic, and only partly explained by Kuratani et al. (Kuratani et al., 1998) using immunohistochemical techniques. Although the embryonic expression patterns of several regulatory genes have been studied in lampreys (Tomsa and Langeland, 1999; Ueki et al., 1998; Myojin et al., 2001; Kuratani et al., 2001), the developmental plan of the lamprey brain is still incompletely understood.
In the present study, we have screened a lamprey cDNA library and identified a cognate cDNA of Pax6 (LjPax6). We have compared the expression patterns of Pax6 in the embryonic brains of the lamprey and the gnathostomes using in situ hybridization, and have also studied the expression patterns of other regulatory genes and found that these genes are expressed in clearly delineated polygonal domains in the lamprey brain. Combining these data with immunostaining of the nerve tracts, we present a developmental plan for the lamprey brain, and conclude that the origin of the basic configuration of the vertebrate forebrain, which is largely similar to the amniote pattern, appears to date back to the ancestor common to all vertebrates.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Isolation of cDNA clones of the lamprey Pax6 gene
cDNA clones of the lamprey Pax6 gene were isolated from the L. japonica larval head cDNA library. The pLjP1-PCRF fragment which contains a Pax1-like paired domain (Ogasawara et al., 2000) was randomly labeled with [32P]-dCTP (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech), and 3.0x105 phages were screened under low-stringency conditions: 6xSSPE, 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), 1x Denhardts solution, 50% formamide at 37°C for 16 hours, and washed in 6x saline sodium citrate (SSC), 0.1% SDS at 37°C for 20 minutes, in 2x SSC, 0.1% SDS at 37°C for 30 minutes, and in 1x SSC, 0.1% SDS at 37°C for 15 minutes. Isolated clones were sequenced using an ABI PRISM 377 DNA Sequencer (Perkin Elmer).
Genomic Southern analysis
High molecular weight genomic DNA of L. japonica was extracted from a single adult liver using a standard procedure (Sambrook et al., 1989). After exhaustive digestion with EcoRI, the DNA fragments were separated electrophoretically on a 1% agarose gel and blotted onto Hybond-N+ nylon membranes (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). The blots were hybridized with randomly primed digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled DNA probes at 50°C for 16 hours, and washed under high-stringency conditions.
Whole-mount in situ hybridization
Digoxigenin-labeled antisense and sense riboprobes were transcribed according to the manufacturers instructions. Fixed embryos were dehydrated and stored in 100% methanol at 20°C. Specimens were treated with a mixture of hydrogen peroxide (one part) and methanol (five parts) overnight, and were rehydrated in PBS containing 0.1% Tween 20 (PBT). After treatment with 0.2 N HCl in PBT for 10 minutes at room temperature (RT), the samples were digested with 10 mg/ml proteinase K (Sigma). They were post-fixed for 20 minutes with PFA/PBT containing 0.2% glutaraldehyde, then washed with PBT, and prehybridized in hybridization buffer (50% formamide, 5x SSC, 1% SDS, 0.05 mg/ml total yeast RNA, 50 mg/ml heparin sulfate, 5 mM ethylene diaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA)-Na2, 0.1% CHAPS) for 1 hour at 65°C. The specimens were then incubated in hybridization buffer with 0.1 mg/ml DIG-labeled RNA probe for 48 hours at 65°C. After hybridization, the specimens were washed twice in 50% formamide, 5x SSC, 1% SDS for 30 minutes at 65°C, and the solution was substituted gradually with 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) containing 0.5 M NaCl and 0.1% Tween 20 (TST). RNaseA was added to a final concentration of 0.05 mg/ml and the specimens incubated for 30 minutes at RT. The samples were washed twice with 2x SSC in 50% formamide for 30 minutes at 65°C, twice in 2x SSC containing 0.3% CHAPS for 30 minutes at 65°C, and twice in 0.2x SSC containing 0.3% CHAPS for 30 minutes at 65°C. For immunological detection, the embryos were blocked with TST containing 0.5% blocking reagent (Boehringer Mannheim) for 60 minutes, and incubated with alkaline phosphatase (AP)-conjugated anti-digoxigenin Fab fragments (diluted 1:4000; Boehringer Mannheim), at 4°C overnight. The specimens were washed five times for 60 minutes each in TST at RT. Alkaline phosphatase activity was detected with NBT/BCIP in NTMT (Boehringer Mannheim). Stained specimens were fixed in PFA/PBS, rehydrated, and clarified with BABB (1:2 mixture of benzyl alcohol and benzyl benzoate).
Whole-mount immunostaining
Fixed embryos stored in methanol were placed in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and methanol (1:1). After washing with TST containing 5% DMSO (TSTd), the embryos were blocked with aqueous 1% periodic acid and 5% nonfat dry milk in TSTd (TSTM). They were incubated in the primary antibody (acetylated tubulin (Sigma) diluted 1:1000 in TSTM) for 2-4 days at RT. After washing with TST, samples were incubated with horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated secondary antibody (diluted 1:200 in TSTM; Zymed). After a final wash in TSTd, the embryos were incubated with the peroxidase substrate 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (DAB, 100 mg/ml) in TST for 1 hour, and allowed to react in TST with the same concentration of DAB with 0.01% hydrogen peroxide.
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RESULTS |
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In the diencephalon, LjPax6 was expressed exclusively in the dorsal forebrain (Fig. 6A, Fig. 7A). Expression of LjDlx1/6, on the other hand, was restricted to the anterior-dorsal thalamus, where it overlapped the region of LjPax6 expression (Fig. 6B, Fig. 7C). LjTTF1 mRNA was restricted to the anterior-ventral diencephalon, complementary to the LjPax6 and LjDlx1/6 domains (Fig. 6C, Fig. 7B). LjOtxA was expressed in the posterior diencephalon, adjacent to the anterior parts of the LjDlx1/6- and LjTTF1-expressing regions (Fig. 6E, Fig. 7D). In the telencephalon, LjPax6 was expressed in the dorsal subdivision (Fig. 7E), whereas the expression of LjDlx1/6 was detected in the anterior subdivision (Fig. 7F). LjEmx was restricted to the posterior subdivision, overlapping the region of LjPax6 expression (Fig. 7G).
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DISCUSSION |
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The deduced amino acid sequence of LjPax6 shows a high level of homology with that of Pax6 cognates of the gnathostomes. The phylogenetic position of LjPax6 as the outgroup of gnathostome Pax6 is consistent with the taxonomic position of Lampetra. Genomic Southern blot analysis using both the paired and homeodomains as probes indicated that L. japonica possesses a single Pax6-related gene in the haploid genome. It therefore seems likely that LjPax6 evolved from a single ancestral gene shared by the agnathans and the gnathostomes. A previous study of Pax1/9 genes has indicated that Pax1 and Pax9 were already duplicated in the lamprey as pan-vertebrate orthologs (Ogasawara et al., 2000). Likewise, the Pax6 gene seems to have arisen before the lamprey-gnathostome split. Some Pax genes in tunicates and amphioxus have been shown to represent ancestral forms before the duplication, as exemplified by Pax1/9, Pax2/5/8 and Pax3/7 (Holland and Holland, 1995; Wada et al., 1997; Wada et al., 1998; Ogasawara et al., 1999; Kozmik et al., 1999; Holland et al., 1999). Therefore, at least three subfamilies (Pax1/9, Pax3/7, and Pax2/5/8) duplicated in the lineage of vertebrates. Lampreys are thus crucial for the evolutionary sequence of the Pax gene evolution. Although one of Pax2/5/8 genes has been isolated from the lamprey, the number of this gene family still remains unknown. Pax3/7 are of particular interest not only in terms of the gene duplication, but also for the evolution of the midbrain and neural crest.
A sequential addition of expression repertoires of the Pax1/9 genes has been proposed in the transition from the agnathans to the gnathostomes (Ogasawara et al., 2000). However, comparison of Pax6 expression in the agnathans and gnathostomes indicates that the field of expression of this gene has not increased substantially during evolution, but has rather diversified in each lineage (see below).
LjPax6 gene expression is developmentally and spatially regulated
Pax6 expression has been analyzed in various vertebrate species, including the mouse (Grindley et al., 1995; Schubert et al., 1995; Stoykova and Gruss, 1994; Stoykova et al., 1996), zebrafish (Püschel et al., 1992; Hauptmann and Gerster, 2000), human (Gerard et al., 1995), chicken (Li et al., 1994) and rat (Matsuo et al., 1993). In every case, Pax6 expression is developmentally regulated, and is first seen in the forebrain, hindbrain and the spinal cord. Later, Pax6 transcripts appear in the telencephalon, the diencephalon, the eye and the myelencephalon in the gnathostomes. Similarly, in the lamprey, LjPax6 transcripts appear in almost the same subset of neural regions, ultimately localizing in the same set of structures (Fig. 3, Fig. 6). This shared sequence and pattern of expression indicates that the regions in which Pax6 is expressed in the CNS had already been acquired in the ancestor common to all vertebrates. However, additional expression domains are evident in the gnathostomes, such as the cerebellar primordium. In the Pax6-null mutant (small eye) mouse, cell proliferation and initial differentiation seem unaffected, but cell migration and neurite extension are disrupted. Therefore, Pax6 may be involved in the migration of cerebellar cells (Engelkamp et al., 1999). The lamprey cerebellum is rudimentary, and its homology to the corpus cerebellum of the jawed vertebrates is unresolved (Nieuwenhuys and Nicholson, 1998). We observed no LjPax6 transcripts in the rostrodorsal myelencephalon, which corresponds to the cerebellar primodium. This suggests that the Pax6-regulated cerebellar patterning of the gnathostomes may have evolved independently after the divergence between the gnathostomes and agnathans.
LjPax6 also exhibits some peculiar expression patterns associated only with the lamprey. In the early stages of development, LjPax6 was not detected in r4, the developmental significance of which is not clear in the present study (Fig. 3C,D). No similar deficit has been observed in gnathostome embryos. Furthermore, LjPax6 is strongly expressed in the dorsal oral ectoderm, the anterior velum ectoderm and the posteriodorsal velum ectoderm, in which gnathostome Pax6 is not expressed. As the velum is unique to agnathans (reviewed by Mallatt, 1996; Kuratani et al., 2001; Ogasawara et al., 2000), LjPax6 expression in the velar ectoderm may have been acquired independently in the lamprey lineage. LjPax6 may be involved in the formation of the oral apparatus unique to the lamprey.
Brain patterning in the lamprey
The pathway of evolution of the vertebrate brain is not completely resolved. Although the amphioxus has some neuronal components comparable with the vertebrate brain (Lacalli et al., 1994), it has no neuromeres identifiable either anatomically or developmentally (Hatscheck, 1881; Willey, 1891; Franz, 1927; Lacalli et al., 1994; Glardon et al., 1997; Glardon et al., 1998; Kozmik et al., 1999; Wada and Satoh, 2001). Expression of these genes is regionalized but not delineated by clear boundaries by which developmental segments can be inferred.
In the vertebrate forebrain, four to six subdivisions called prosomeres (P1-P6) have been proposed that provide the developmental bases for its anatomical architecture (Puelles, 1995). In gnathostomes, at least some of the prosomeres have specific cell lineages, and the cells of one compartment do not easily mix with those of neighboring compartments (Figdor and Stern, 1993). Although there is general agreement on the presence of two posterior compartments representing the pretectum (P1) and the dorsal thalamus (P2), the number of more rostral compartments is still controversial.
The lamprey has a more advanced CNS than the amphioxus, and several compartments have been identified anatomically (Bergquist and Källén, 1953; Pombal and Puelles, 1999; Nieuwenhuys and Nicholson, 1998; Kuratani et al., 1998). In a series of review papers, Bergquist has shown that the larval lamprey brain consists of polygonal domains found in the brain wall, which are arranged serially along the dorsoventral and anteroposterior axes of the neural tube (Fig. 8C). These domains are actually discrete cell masses that Bergquist calls Grundgebiete or migration areas, which possibly represent local restrictions of cell lineages or, at least, regionalizations of neuroblasts. Bergquists scheme is very similar, if not identical, to the prosomeric models postulated for the gnathostomes (Fig. 8B). In the adult lamprey brain, immunohistochemical analysis has also revealed that the common segmental and longitudinal organization of the neural tube still exists (Pombal and Puelles, 1999; Pombal et al., 2001). In the lamprey embryo, rhombomeric compartments and a possible P1/P2 boundary have been identified immunohistochemically (Kuratani et al., 1998; Horigome et al., 1999). Furthermore, lamprey Otx transcripts are expressed in the rostral neural tube, including the midbrain and forebrain, with the caudal limit of this expression possibly at the mid-hindbrain boundary (Ueki et al., 1998; Tomsa and Langeland, 1999). Lamprey Dlx cognate transcripts are expressed in the ventral diencephalon and telencephalon (Neidert et al., 2001; Myojin et al., 2001). In the evolutionary context, the crucial questions are, therefore, how many segments are arranged in which pattern in the lamprey brain, and which of these patterns are shared between the lamprey and the gnathostomes?
In gnathostomes, the positions of the nerve tracts are conserved between species (von Kupffer, 1896; Figdor and Stern, 1993; Kuratani and Horigome, 2000; Kuratani et al., 2000). Such anatomical conservation is known to be associated with compartmentalization of the neural tube: P1 is characterized by the posterior commissure and P2 by the habenular commissure (Figdor and Stern, 1993). Caudal to the optic chiasm, tuberal and mammillary hypothalamic territories are clearly identifiable. In the present study, the posterior commissure, the habenular commissure and the optic chiasm were found to have homologous topography (Fig. 9), implying the presence of P1 and P2 in all vertebrate brains. This is also consistent with the expression of regulatory genes. In the stage 26 lamprey brain, the rostral domain of LjOtxA expression overlaps the caudal part of the LjPax6-expressing domain (compare Fig. 6A,E, Fig. 8A). Considering the positions of the epiphysis, the posterior commissure and the habenular commissure, and comparing the pattern with that known for the embryonic mouse brain (Fig. 8B), the LjOtxA-LjPax6 co-expressing domain most probably corresponds to the dorsal thalamus plus the pretectum (P1+P2, Fig. 8A). Gene expression patterns and anatomical structures are the only clue to the boundaries of the more rostral segments.
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The morphology of the telencephalon is also problematic. Based on the expression patterns of the regulatory genes, the gnathostome telencephalon is assumed to be composed of three major components: the pallium (medial, dorsal, and lateral pallium)(Puelles et al., 2000), the intermediate zone (ventral pallium)(Puelles et al., 2000) and the subpallium (striatum). Emx and Pax6 are expressed in the pallium, and Dlx in the subpallium (Puelles et al., 2000). In a previous study, we were unable to detect the presence of such subdivisions in the lamprey telencephalon using transversely sectioned specimens (Myojin et al., 2001). However, after scrutinizing whole-mount embryos, we conclude that the lamprey telencephalon may be closer to the gnathostome plan than we originally believed. In the stage 26 forebrain, a transverse (morphologically horizontal) furrow is found, designated by von Kupffer (von Kupffer, 1906) as the sulcus intraencephalicus anterior (thick broken line (sa) in Fig. 8A). Characteristic gene expression is observed in the part of the brain that is rostral and dorsal to this sulcus. LjPax6 is expressed in the dorsal part and LjDlx1/6 in the ventral part, possibly corresponding to the pallium and striatum in the lamprey, respectively (Pombal and Puelles, 1999). Furthermore, in our new data, LjEmx is restricted to a small dorsal domain that expresses this gene plus LjPax6, and resembles the dorsal pallium of the gnathostomes (Fig. 8A,B). These patterns of gene expression in this part of the lamprey brain are extremely reminiscent of the gnathostome telencephalon (Puelles et al., 2000; Fig. 8A). Although this may also imply the presence of the P3/P4 boundary (pallio-subpallial boundary) proposed by Puelles et al. (Puelles et al., 2000), it could not be followed into the dorsal diencephalic and hypothalamic regions (Fig. 8A). Finally, there is a region in the gnathostome telencephalon that includes the pallidum, in which Dlx and TTF1 are both expressed (Fig. 8B). The loss of TTF1 expression in the ventral telencephalic region of the lamprey forebrain (Fig. 6C, Fig. 8A) may be related to the apparent absence of a pallidum in this animal (Nieuwenhuys and Nicholson, 1998).
In conclusion, the present study of the lamprey brain primordium suggests the presence of the P1 and P2 segments, a longitudinally extending sulcus limitans that terminates rostrally close to the optic chiasm, a hypothalamus and a tripartite telencephalon-like domain. All these features are directly comparable with those in the model established in the mouse (Fig. 8B). Our results have not further clarified the number of segments in the rostralmost part of the brain (Fig. 8A). We may assume that the shared morphological patterns described above are very old in origin, possibly dating to the divergence of the lampreys and the gnathostomes (Fig. 9). As recent analyses based on several molecules place hagfishes as the sister group of the lamprey (Mallatt and Sullivan, 1998; Kuraku et al., 1999), the segments listed above were already present in the common ancestor of all the vertebrates. The recent discovery of the earliest fossil vertebrates in the early Cambrian period (490-545 million years ago)(Shu et al., 1999) suggests that the segmental plan underlying vertebrate brain development may have an even longer history (Fig. 9). The absence of compartments and the presence of similar anteroposterior regulation by various regulatory genes in cephalochordates imply that the vertebrate-specific compartments listed above were acquired by rough regionalization of the neurectoderm already present in the cephalochordates. It may have been proliferation of neurectodermal cells, as well as the restriction of local cell lineages to form boundaries, that facilitated this most curious evolutionary transition.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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