Max Planck Institute for Molecular, Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden, Pfotenhauer Str. 108, 01307 Dresden, FR of Germany
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: brand{at}mpi-cbg.de)
Accepted 27 November 2001
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Competence, Fgf8, pou2, Oct3/4, Pou5f1, MHB, Isthmus, pax2, spiel-ohne-grenzen, Hindbrain, Zebrafish
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INTRODUCTION |
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Evidence for this concept has come from functional studies of the molecules involved. Several transcription factors of the Pax, Otx, Gbx and Lim class play pivotal roles during development and function of the MHB organizer. In zebrafish, null mutations for the pax2.1 gene (pax2a Zebrafish Information Network) (no isthmus or noi) or inactivation of the eng2 and eng3 genes causes absence of the midbrain, MHB and cerebellum (Brand et al., 1996; Lun and Brand, 1998
; Pfeffer et al., 1998
; Scholpp and Brand, 2001
), similar to the cognate mouse phenotypes (Millen et al., 1994
; Wurst et al., 1994
; Favor et al., 1996
; Urbanek et al., 1997
; Schwarz et al., 1997
). The secreted signaling molecules Wnt1 (McMahon et al., 1992
) and Fgf8 are thought to mediate organizer function. Fgf8 in particular is expressed in the MHB organizer and when added ectopically can mimic the organizing activity (Crossley et al., 1996
). Functional studies of the acerebellar/fgf8 (ace) mutant in zebrafish and targeted disruption in mice highlight the crucial function of Fgf8 in this process (Brand et al., 1996
; Reifers et al., 1998
; Meyers et al., 1998
; Picker et al., 1999
). Like other Fgfs, Fgf8 is thought to signal through the MAP kinase pathway (Basilico and Moscatelli, 1992
), resulting in activation of the specific target genes gbx2, spry2, spry4, erm and pea3 after exposure to Fgf8 (Liu et al., 1999
; Hidalgo-Sanchez et al., 1999
; Martinez et al., 1999
; Chambers et al., 2000
; Fürthauer et al., 2001
; Raible and Brand, 2001
; Roehl and Nüsslein-Volhard, 2001
; Lun et al., 2002
). Furthermore, Fgf8 is required during formation of the heart field, for limb development, neural induction, telencephalon patterning, left-right asymmetry, gastrulation and ear development, among others (Brand et al., 1996
; Shimamura and Rubenstein, 1997
; Meyers and Martin, 1999
; Sun et al., 1999
; Reifers et al., 2000b
; Shanmugalingam et al., 2000
; Moon and Capecchi, 2000
; Streit et al., 2000
). Thus, Fgf8 elicits very different responses in different embryonic target cells, raising the important question of how the differential competence of the responding cells arises.
We have analyzed the function of the zebrafish spiel-ohne-grenzen (spg) gene during neural development. We find that spg allows the early neuroectodermal cells around the MHB to respond to Fgf8. spg alleles have been isolated in several mutagenesis screens as mutations affecting MHB morphology (Schier et al., 1996a; Burgess et al., 2002
). In the accompanying paper (Burgess et al., 2002
), we report that spg mutants affect the gene encoding the transcription factor Pou2, an ortholog of the mammalian Oct3/Oct4/Pou5f1 gene. We now show that spg serves a key function during development of the MHB and the hindbrain. Such a function has not been described for the mammalian gene; therefore, we have identified a novel component of the MHB genetic hierarchy. We show that spg/pou2 functions specifically in patterning the neuroectoderm where it is necessary to establish and maintain the MHB organizer and the hindbrain primordium; whereas, it appears dispensable for the earliest stage of subdividing the neuroectoderm. Importantly, RNA injections and Fgf8-bead implantations demonstrate that the early neural primordium of spg mutants is insensitive to the effects of Fgf8. In particular, both Pou2 and Fgf8 are necessary for the initiation of gbx2 expression at the MHB primordium. We, thus, suggest that spg/pou2 is required to make neuroectodermal cells competent to respond to Fgf8, as assayed by their ability to activate the correct target genes.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Fish lines
Alleles of spgm216, spge713 and spghi349 are described elsewhere (Schier et al., 1996b; Burgess et al., 2002
), the latter-most allele probably being a null allele [see Burgess et al. (Burgess et al., 2002
) for a description of the molecular nature of these alleles]. The aceti282/fgf8 allele has been described previously (Brand et al., 1996
; Reifers et al., 1998
). Heterozygous double carriers for spgm216 and aceti282 were identified by random intercrosses.
Staining of living embryos
Confocal microscopy of Bodipy-Ceramide (Molecular Probes) was as described previously (Picker et al., 1999). Acridine Orange (2 µg/ml, Molecular Probes) was added into the medium surrounding dechorionated embryos for 4 hours during gastrulation, at the 5 somite stage and at the 12 somite stage.
Analysis of gene expression
Standard methods for whole-mount RNA in situ hybridization (ISH) were used, with laboratory modifications as described elsewhere (Reifers et al., 1998). Probes for the following genes were used: krox20 (egr2 Zebrafish Information Network) (Oxtoby and Jowett, 1993
); pax2.1 (Krauss et al., 1991a
); pax6 (Macdonald et al., 1994
); eng2 (eng2a Zebrafish Information Network) (Ekker et al., 1992
; Fjose et al., 1988
); shh (Krauss et al., 1993
); ephA4 (efna4 Zebrafish Information Network) (Xu et al., 1994
); wnt1 (Kelly et al., 1993
); wnt4 (Ungar et al., 1995
); otx2 (Mori et al., 1994
); pax7 (Seo et al., 1998a
); fgf8 (Reifers et al., 1998
); spry4 (Fürthauer et al., 2001
); six3 (Seo et al., 1998b
); gbx1 and gbx2 (Lun et al., 2002
); fkd3 (foxb1.2 Zebrafish Information Network) (Odenthal and Nusslein-Volhard, 1998
); valentino (Moens et al., 1996
); wnt8b (Kelly et al., 1995
); emx1 (Morita et al., 1995
); and Oct3/Oct4 (Schoeler et al., 1989
).
Immuno- and histochemistry
Antibody staining against acetylated tubulin was carried out as previously described (Macdonald et al., 1997). Embryos for histological sections were embedded in epoxide resin, sectioned with a microtome (1 µm sections) and stained with Methylene Blue-Toluidine Blue, as described elsewhere (Kuwada et al., 1990
). Brain morphology and staining (embryos were mounted in 70% glycerol after in situ hybridization) were documented on a Zeiss axiophot.
RNA injections
cDNA of murine Oct3/4, fgf8, pou2 and nuclear lacZ, subcloned into pCS2+ (Rupp et al., 1994), were linearized and transcribed using the SP6 message mMachine kit (Ambion). The amount of mRNA injected was estimated from the concentration and volume of a sphere of RNA solution (0.25M KCl, 0.2% Phenol Red) injected into oil at the same pressure settings. RNA solution was backloaded into borosilicate capillaries prepared on a Sutter puller and injected into the cytoplasm of one cell of 2-cell stage embryos (about 100 pg fgf8 mRNA or 200 pg of pou2 mRNA per embryo). The injected mRNA has a strong tendency to stay in the progeny of the injected blastomere, as monitored by the unilateral distribution of co-injected lacZ mRNA, detected by staining with anti-ß-gal antibody (Promega, 1:500) after in situ hybridization.
Bead implantation
Bead implantation was carried out as previously described (Reifers et al., 2000b). Beads coated with Fgf8b or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) control beads were implanted at indicated regions of wild-type and spg mutant embryos at the 13 somite stage, embryos were fixed at 26 hpf.
Transplantation
Zygotes of wild-type embryos were labeled by injection of 10% HRP-coupled tetramethylrhodaminedextran (Mr=10,000, Molecular Probes D-1817) in 0.25M KCl and raised together with unlabeled host embryos from a heterozygous cross of spg carriers. Heterotopic transplantations of wild-type donor cells into host embryos were made between sphere and shield stage using a trimmed borosilicate capillary. Host embryos were fixed at the tailbud stage. After in situ hybridization, transplanted cells were stained combining the Vectastain ABC system (VectorLabs) and the DAB system (Sigma).
Inhibitor treatment
For inhibition of the Fgf pathway, wild-type and spg embryos were treated with the chemical inhibitor SU5402, which blocks activity of all Fgf receptors (Calbiochem) (Mohammadi et al., 1997). The inhibitor was applied at 20 µM into embryo medium at 28°C in the dark and embryos were incubated from end of gastrulation until fixation at the eight-somite stage.
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Results |
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Caudal expansion of prosencephalic gene expression
Morphological, histological and immunohistochemical inspection at pharyngula stages showed that forebrain architecture was largely normal in spg mutants (Fig. 1). ace/fgf8 mutants show abnormal retinotectal projection and a defective optic chiasm (Picker et al., 1999; Shanmugalingam et al., 2000
), which prompted us to study forebrain marker expression and to examine specifically the visual system in spg mutants using anterograde fills with DiI. In all of seven examined spg mutants, we observed normal contralateral retinotectal mapping of retinal ganglion cell axons (Fig. 4F) and a properly elaborated decussation of the optic nerve (Fig. 4G). In our marker analysis, we find evidence for abnormal development of the forebrain neural plate, especially of the diencephalic primordium. emx1 is expressed in the telencephalic primordium at the end of gastrulation, lining the anteriormost border of the developing brain, and in a bilateral transverse stripe of expression in the posterior diencephalon, which does not fuse at the midline (Morita et al., 1995
). These bilateral stripes are parallel to, yet separate from, the pax2.1 stripes at the MHB (Fig. 4A). In spg mutant embryos, emx1 expression appears to be generally upregulated in the telencephalic primordium, and the bilateral transverse stripes in the diencephalon almost fuse with the strongly reduced MHB domain of pax2.1 (Fig. 4A'; pax2.1 expression is shown in red). anf1 is expressed in a similar way to emx1 but with a triangular domain in the diencephalon (Fig. 4B) (Shanmugalingam et al., 2000
; Kazanskaya et al., 1997
) that is not seen in spg embryos (Fig. 4B'). Furthermore, expression of pax6 at the di-mesencephalic boundary (Macdonald et al., 1994
) is upregulated and strongly expanded caudally from its onset of expression (Fig. 4C').
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Early failure of hindbrain gene expression in spg mutants
During the analysis of MHB-specific genes such as fgf8 and spry4, we found that these genes are also affected in their hindbrain expression (Fig. 2J',N'). pou2 is itself expressed in the hindbrain primordium at the end of gastrulation (Burgess et al., 2002; Hauptmann and Gerster, 1995
) prompting us to examine establishment of gene expression in the hindbrain primordium of spg embryos. We find that gene expression in the hindbrain fails from late gastrula stages onwards, as is most clearly evident from the analysis of gbx2 expression. gbx2 expression is initiated first in the mesendoderm around 80% of epiboly and subsequently around 90% within the overlying hindbrain neuroectoderm (Lun et al., 2002
) (Fig. 5C-E). Studies of acerebellar (ace) mutants have shown that both tissue layers absolutely require fgf8 to express gbx2 (Fig. 5E') (Lun et al., 2002
). By contrast, in spg mutants, neuroectodermal expression of gbx2 is not initiated at all (Fig. 5D'), whereas the underlying mesendodermal expression of gbx2 occurs normally (Fig. 5C',D'; arrowhead in D'). In addition to gbx2, ectodermal expression of the forkhead domain transcription factor fkd3 (Odenthal and Nüsslein-Volhard, 1998
) is absent from the hindbrain primordium of spg embryos (Fig. 5F'). Therefore, although positioning of the MHB in the neuroectoderm appears normal, global gene expression in the hindbrain primordium, a known site of pou2 expression (Burgess et al., 2002
), is already severely disrupted before the end of gastrulation in spg mutants.
During the early segmentation period, pou2 expression becomes confined to distinct cell populations in r2 and r4 (Fig. 5L) (Hauptmann and Gerster, 1995). Genes that mark the segmental organization of the hindbrain, such as krox20, ephA4, wnt8b, hoxb1a and hoxb4a are all strongly affected in their expression (Fig. 5G-K'), probably owing to a mixture of a global and a rhombomere specific requirement for pou2 in the hindbrain. Next to the pou2-expressing rhombomeres r2 and r4, krox20, ephA4 and wnt8b are normally expressed within r3 and r5. In spg mutants, the size of r3 and r5 appears reduced, whereas that of the intermittent r4 appears normal or enlarged (Fig. 4G'-I'). Thus, in addition to the early gene expression defects of the hindbrain primordium, rhombomeres also show specific defects during segmentation stages that differ depending on the rhombomere considered. This may reflect a later, rhombomere-restricted function of pou2. six3 expression in the prospective telencephalon and eye field is not altered in spg, whereas ephA4 expression in the otic placode is reduced, and diencephalic expression is posteriorly expanded into the midbrain and MHB (Fig. 5H'), as described above for other diencephalic markers, except for wnt8b, which is not altered (Fig. 5I'). Expression of the Hox genes hoxb1a in rhombomere 4 (r4) and hoxb4a from r7 into the spinal cord (Fig. 5J,J') is mildly affected in spg embryos at midsomitogenesis. The hoxb1a domain appears more diffuse compared with the wild type and is even wider towards the end of somitogenesis (Fig. 5K'), but more strikingly, the gap between the hoxb1a and hoxb4a domains in the r4-r7 territory is significantly reduced in spg embryos, as indicated by brackets in Fig. 5J'. At late somitogenesis stages, hoxb1a is more strongly affected in spg mutants. Concomitant with the reduced odd-numbered rhombomeres, r4 apparently enlarges at the expense of r3 and 5, as judged from hoxb1a/krox20 double staining (Fig. 5K,K'). The expression of pou2 itself provides one of the clearest example for a function of spg/pou2 in specific hindbrain rhombomeres. In embryos that carry the spge713 point allele, the discrete patches of pou2 expression in r2 and r4 are strongly reduced or absent in spg mutants (Fig. 5L'). Embryos carrying the apparent null allele spghi349 show complete absence of expression in all pou2 domains (Fig. 5L''). Expression of the bZIP transcription factor valentino/Kreisler (Manzanares et al., 1999
; Cordes and Barsh, 1994
) in r5 and r6 is abrogated in r5 but unaffected in r6, including the neural crest streaming from r6 (Fig. 5M'). Consistent with the disorganization of hindbrain commissures (Burgess et al., 2002
), expression of fkd3 (Fig. 5N) (Odenthal and Nusslein-Volhard, 1998
) at rhombomere boundaries is nearly abolished in spg embryos (Fig. 5N').
Neurogenesis, as labeled by zath1 expression, is reduced in spg mutants in the ventricular zone of the hindbrain ventricle at 24 and 32 hpf (Fig. 5O',P'). zath1 expression in the mutants occurs also in a position corresponding to the cerebellar anlage/posterior MHB in the wild-type (arrow). Expression in this tissue might either reflect an expanded rhombic lip, or a partial reformation of the cerebellum at later stages in the mutants. This tissue does not express the fore/midbrain marker otx2 (Fig. 5Q), and we therefore tentatively suggest that this is the result of a partial re-formation of cerebellar tissue after 30 hpf in the spg mutants, explaining some of the observed variation in morphological strength. Earlier stages of neurogenesis, as labeled by the proneural bHLH transcription factor ngn1 are also affected. ngn1 is expressed in trigeminal precursors and in proneural cell clusters in the brain primordium already at the end of gastrulation, and this expression fails to be initiated in spg mutants (Fig. 5R,R'). Expression in three rostrocaudal rows of cells within the presumptive spinal cord containing the precursors of motoneurons, interneurons and sensory neurons is, however, initiated normally in spg mutants, although the rows are compressed into a narrower space.
Mesendoderm development in spg embryos
In addition to the brain phenotype, spg mutants have a curved and malformed tail with misshapen somites (Burgess et al., 2002), suggesting the existence of non-neural defects. We find that myod expression is strongly reduced in somitic precursors (Fig. 5T), but unaffected in adaxial cells. Somitic expression of other markers like snail1 (Hammerschmidt and Nüsslein-Volhard, 1993
), eng2 (Devoto et al., 1996
) and fgf4.1 (Grandel et al., 2000
) are also reduced in spg embryos during somitogenesis (not shown). However, unlike in acerebellar mutant embryos (Reifers et al., 1998
), somitic alterations are not morphologically distinguishable before the beginning of pharyngula stages. Because induction of muscle pioneers is dependent on signals from the notochord (Halpern et al., 1993
), we analyzed markers expressed in the midline mesoderm. The expression of the pan-mesodermal gene ntl (Schulte-Merker et al., 1994
), the early mesendodermal marker wnt8 (Kelly et al., 1995
) and the early axial mesoderm marker flh/znot (Talbot et al., 1995
) are not altered at gastrulation stages (not shown). Similar to her5 (Fig. 2T), the expression of the anterior prechordal plate marker gsc (Schulte-Merker et al., 1994
) is normal at 70% of epiboly and tailbud stage, but shows reduced midline expression at the four-somite stage in the mutant. The intermediate mesodermal expression of pax2.1 is never affected in spg mutants. By contrast, expression of the endoderm specific marker sox17 (Alexander and Stainier, 1999
) is strongly reduced at the tailbud stage (Fig. 5S') but not at its onset around 50% of epiboly, although pou2 expression is restricted to the ectoderm during gastrulation (inset). The reduction in sox17 expression may be due to the general expression of pou2 at pre-gastrula stages. Expression of nkx2.5 in the heart primordium (Chen et al., 1996
; Reifers et al., 2000b
) is only slightly reduced at the eight-somite stage (not shown).
Specific requirement for spg/pou2 in the neuroectoderm
The abnormal development of both the endomesodermal and ectodermal layers led us to ask in which germlayer normal spg/pou2 activity is required to allow normal hindbrain development (Fig. 6). We transplanted wild-type cells before onset of gastrulation into the prospective ectoderm or mesoderm of spg mutants. After developing until the tailbud stage, chimeric embryos were examined for expression of gbx2 or pax2.1. Previous data have shown that both mesendodermal and neuroectodermal expression of gbx2 expression requires Fgf8 (Fig. 5E', Fig. 6G) (Lun et al., 2002). By contrast, only the neuroectodermal gbx2 expression requires spg, and expression in the underlying mesendoderm is intact (Fig. 5C',D'). When the transplanted wild-type cells were located in the neuroectoderm, they expressed gbx2 in spg embryos, whereas a location in the mesoderm was not sufficient to restore neuroectodermal expression (Fig. 6A,B,E) (Table 1); Cross-sections confirmed that the expressing cells were confined to the ectoderm (Fig. 6B, bracket). Chimeric spg embryos with neuroectodermal clones fixed during mid-somitogenesis also showed rescue of pax2.1 at the MHB (Fig. 6C,D). We conclude that the neuroectoderm of spg mutants is permissive for proper gbx2 and pax2.1 expression of wild-type cells, whereas wild-type cells located in the mesodermal layer do not support ectodermal expression of these markers (Fig. 6E). Together with the fact that pou2 is expressed only in the neuroectodermal germlayer of the gastrula, these results strongly suggest that spg/pou2 specifically functions in the neuroectoderm during gastrulation, independently of its ubiquitous expression during pre-gastrula stages (Fig. 6G).
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Combinatorial roles for pou2 and fgf8 in the hindbrain
The phenotypic similarities between ace/fgf8 and spg/pou2 mutants raised the possibility that these genes might act in the same pathway, or in synergistic pathways. fgf8 transcription is initiated normally in spg mutants at 70% epiboly, but becomes downregulated by the end of gastrulation and is completely lost during somitogenesis (Fig. 2I-K'). We therefore injected fgf8 mRNA unilaterally into wild-type and spg two-cell stage embryos to determine if fgf8 was capable of rescuing any aspect of the spg phenotype. We used gbx2 and spry4, known early downstream targets of Fgf8, as markers to assay the effects of fgf8 mis-expression at the end of gastrulation in spg embryos. In wild-type embryos, fgf8 mis-expression caused a strong dorsalization of the whole embryo (Fürthauer et al., 1997; Reifers et al., 1998
), which is visible as a pronounced dorsoventral expansion of spry4 and gbx2 in the injected half (Fig. 7A,C, arrow). As in the wild type, fgf8-mRNA injection into spg mutants results in strong lateral expansion of the endogenous mesendodermal domain of gbx2 (Fig. 7B), confirming that fgf8 can also exert its dorsalizing activity in spg embryos; the residual, weak expression of spry4 may be similarly expanded (Fig. 7D). Moreover, in the neuroectoderm of wild-type embryos, fgf8 mRNA injection also caused upregulation of the endogenous expression domains of both gbx2 and spry4 (Fig. 7A,C). Unexpectedly, and in contrast to the mesendodermal expression domain, the neuroectodermal expression of gbx2 and spry4 could not be initiated (gbx2) or restored to the wild-type level (spry4) in spg embryos injected with fgf8 mRNA (Fig. 7B,D). The gbx2 expression seen in Fig. 7B is the mesendodermal domain that is unaffected in spg mutants (see also Fig. 5C',D'). Equivalent results were obtained with fgf8 injection when wild-type and spg mutant embryos were fixed at early and mid-somitogenesis stages (not shown). Thus, the hindbrain and MHB primordium of spg/pou2 mutants appear to be insensitive to Fgf8 signaling. In mice, Fgf8 and Gbx2 are thought to act in a feedback loop (Garda et al., 2001
); the loop could simply be interrupted between fgf8 and gbx2 by the absence of pou2, if pou2 acts within this loop upstream of gbx2. We therefore tested whether injection of pou2 mRNA into ace embryos could restore gbx2 expression, and found that this was not the case (Fig. 7E,F). These findings show that both Fgf8 and Pou2 are required for gbx2 and spry4 expression in the ectoderm. In addition to gbx2 and spry4, we also found transcriptional activation of fkd3 within the hindbrain primordium to be dependent on both pou2 and fgf8 (not shown).
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To examine how specific pou2 function might be for Fgf8, we studied the phenotype of spg/ace double homozygous mutants. At 90% epiboly, spg/ace double mutants embryos show no gbx2 expression, in the same way as ace single mutants (not shown; see also Fig. 5E'). At later stages, however, the double mutants are easily distinguishable, because their MHB and their ear and tail phenotypes are stronger than that of either single mutant. The prospective tectal region is strongly reduced in size, and the otic placodes are extremely small and never develop into otic vesicles (Fig. 8J). In situ analysis shows that in the double mutants, pax2.1 expression is already almost completely abolished at the MHB during early somitogenesis stages, whereas it is still recognizably expressed in either single mutant embryo (Fig. 8E,H,K). This finding suggests that at later stages, pou2 might also function independently of Fgf8, possibly in conjunction with other Fgfs. Given the often redundant nature of Fgf signaling, a stronger phenotype might arise from a pou2 requirement for mediating the effects of Fgfs other than Fgf8 that are also expressed at the MHB (Reifers et al., 2000a). We therefore compared the double mutant phenotype to the phenotype of embryos where all Fgf signaling is blocked, owing to pharmacological inhibition with SU5402 in a spg/pou2 mutant background (Fig. 8M-P). At the eight-somite stage pax2.1 expression is reduced at the MHB in inhibitor-treated wild-type embryos, resembling pax2.1 expression in ace mutants at the same age (Reifers et al., 1998
), although the expression domain is more reduced than in ace mutants (Fig. 8N). Inhibitor treatment of spg mutant embryos, which normally show a dorsally restricted pax2.1 MHB domain at the eight-somite stage, leads to complete abrogation of pax2.1 expression at the MHB (Fig. 8O,P), almost mimicking the spg/ace double mutant phenotype (Fig. 8K). These findings suggest that both additional Fgfs and non-Fgf-dependent pathways contribute to the enhanced phenotype of spg/ace double mutant embryos.
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DISCUSSION |
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spg functions during establishment of the MHB- and hindbrain neuroectoderm
Key molecules that control MHB development, such as Fgf8, Pax2.1 and Wnt1, are already expressed during the earliest, establishment, phase of MHB organizer development (Reifers et al., 1998; Lun and Brand, 1998
). Investigation of no isthmus (noi)/pax2.1 and acerebellar (ace)/fgf8 mutant embryos has revealed that pax2.1, fgf8 and wnt1 define three separate and independent signaling pathways during this initial phase of MHB development at around 80% of epiboly (reviewed by Rhinn and Brand, 2001
). During early somitogenesis, these genes become mutually dependent, demarcating the transition from the establishment to the maintenance phase of MHB development. Fgf8 serves a key function both in the hindbrain primordium and during maintenance of the MHB organizer (Reifers et al., 1998
; Fürthauer et al., 2001
; Raible and Brand, 2001
), and the phenotype of spg/pou2 mutants suggests that the function of spg/pou2 is closely related, but not identical to that of ace/fgf8.
Given that pou2 is also expressed maternally and in the pregastrula zygote (Takeda et al., 1994; Hauptmann and Gerster, 1995
), it was important to determine whether this pregastrula expression phase influences the later neuroectodermal function of spg/pou2. The loss of endodermal sox17 expression that we have observed in spg mutants may reflect a spg/pou2 function at the pregastrula-stage, because after the onset of gastrulation, pou2 is no longer expressed in the endomesoderm. This phenotype needs further examination. Mild Oct4 overexpression in mouse ES cells triggers endoderm and mesoderm differentiation, also suggesting a possible role of this gene in endoderm development (Niwa et al., 2000
). Interestingly, POU-type transcription factors often heterodimerize with HMG-domain proteins (Kamachi et al., 2000
). Pou2 might therefore be a binding partner for the zebrafish HMG domain protein Casanova, a crucial regulator of endoderm development and sox17 expression (Dickmeis et al., 2001
; Kikuchi et al., 2001
). With respect to neuroectodermal development, the results of the transplantation experiments, together with the expression pattern of pou2, argue that the effect on the neuroectoderm is a specific function of spg/pou2, and not a secondary consequence of altered endodermal development. For MHB development, a crucial event is the positioning of the organizer in the gastrula neuroectoderm. In mice and chick, positioning is reflected in formation of a molecular interface between the Otx2 and Gbx2 genes (Hidalgo-Sanchez et al., 1999
; Millet et al., 1999
; Broccoli et al., 1999
). In zebrafish, this situation is very similar, but not identical, as the function of gbx2 appears to have switched to gbx1 (Lun et al., 2002
; Rhinn and Brand, 2001
). In this respect, our observation that the otx2/gbx1 interface is formed normally in spg mutants is important, as is the finding that expression of fgf8 and wnt1 is initiated in the correct spatial domain in spg mutants. Together, this shows that the neuroectoderm is not generally defective in spg mutants.
Shortly after the initial formation of the otx2/gbx1 interface (around 70% of epiboly), the gene expression program in spg mutants becomes specifically abnormal in the MHB and the hindbrain primordium, coincident with the time and place of restricted pou2 expression in the neuroectoderm. By contrast, anterior neural plate markers such as six3 or otx2 are not or only mildly affected in the mutants, consistent with the notion that spg/pou2 acts specifically within the MHB and hindbrain primordium. The strong reduction in pax2.1 staining and wnt1 staining illustrates the function in midbrain development (Fig. 8Q). In fact, given its expression profile and requirement in pax2.1 activation, spg/pou2 encodes the first candidate regulator of pax2.1 expression; this regulation may well be direct, as a functional pax2.1 promoter fragment contains putative POU protein binding sites (Picker et al., 2002) (A. Picker and M. B., unpublished). The requirement for early hindbrain development is most clearly seen by the effects on the markers gbx2, fkd3 and spry4, all of which become activated at this stage in the hindbrain primordium. Expression of these marker genes has been clearly linked to Fgf signaling (Chambers and Mason, 2000
; Liu et al., 1999
; Fürthauer et al., 2001
; Darlington, 1999
) (K. Lun and M. B., unpublished), further strengthening the case for a relation between spg/pou2 function and Fgf8 signaling. Given that expression of these genes and fgf8, wnt1 and her5 becomes abnormal from 80% of epiboly onwards, this marks the time when pou2 first exerts a crucial function in the MHB and hindbrain neuroectoderm. These genes could require spg/pou2 directly or indirectly for their expression. Many of the gene expression defects we observed at later stages in spg mutants are also likely to be due ultimately to this early failure to express gbx2, spry4, pax2.1 and fkd3 (e.g. the reduced eng2 and eng3 expression is probably due to loss of pax2.1 expression, since pax2.1 is absolutely required for eng gene expression) (Lun and Brand, 1998
). In summary, our results show that spg is required for proper development of the MHB organizer and the hindbrain primordium, positively regulating expression of pax2.1, krox20, gbx2, fgf8, spry4 and fkd3 at the end of gastrulation.
Competence to respond to Fgf8 in the early hindbrain requires spg/pou2
Fgf8 is expressed in several domains in or around the early neuroectoderm, and the same molecule functions differently in different tissues. The different potential to respond must therefore be encoded by the developmental state or history of the target tissue, referred to as competence to respond in a specific way to an inductive signal, in this case Fgf8. The factors that mediate competence to respond to Fgf8 are so far unknown; our analysis suggests that Pou2 is one such factor. Our transplantation assays revealed that spg/pou2 is cell autonomously required in the neuroectoderm, in accordance with its expression pattern and the function of pou2 as a transcriptional regulator. While addressing the mechanism by which pou2 exerts its effects in the earlier neuroectoderm through fgf8 mRNA injection and bead implantation assays, we found that spg mutants were regionally insensitive to the effects of fgf8 expression. Providing fgf8 mRNA or Fgf8 protein to spg embryos was not sufficient to restore expression of the target genes gbx2 and spry4 to spg mutants, although other effects that characteristically result from Fgf8 treatment, e.g. dorsalization, were still evident. Conversely, providing pou2 mRNA back to ace/fgf8 mutants, which normally lack gbx2 expression, failed to restore gbx2 and fkd3 expression, although pou2 injections clearly rescued the spg mutant phenotype (Burgess et al., 2002). Together with the results of the spg/ace double mutant phenotype, these data suggest that pou2 and fgf8 do not act in a simple linear pathway that leads to gbx2, fkd3 and spry4 activation, but rather are both required to synergistically activate these genes (Fig. 8Q). Mechanistically, Pou2 might, for example, require an activating signal that is under the control of Fgf8, such as phosphorylation, for its activity (this signal would be absent in ace mutants) or both a target of the MAP kinase pathway and Pou2 could act together in a transcriptional complex controlling gbx2 expression. Further evidence to support the theory that pou2 is not simply downstream of fgf8 comes from the analysis of embryos where Fgf signaling has been pharmacologically inhibited, and from studying pou2 expression in ace mutants. In both conditions, pou2 expression is initially normal, and becomes only reduced from somitogenesis stages onwards, when maintenance mechanisms start to operate (G. R., unpublished). In summary, initial processes involving the spatiotemporal set up of the MHB primordium and the hindbrain during mid-gastrulation stages are independent of pou2, whereas the MHB- and hindbrain primordium is made competent to respond to the effects of Fgf8 by expressing pou2 from the establishment phase at the end of gastrulation onwards. In particular, we propose that pou2 and fgf8 are jointly required to initiate expression of gbx2, spry4 and fkd3 in the hindbrain primordium.
Our work raises several new questions with respect to the issue of competence. If the spatially restricted expression of pou2 serves to make neuroectoderm competent, how in turn is the expression of pou2 set up? The answer to this question will be of particular interest, because the interface between otx2 and gbx1 that may position the MHB is forming normally in spg mutants. A further question that we have not yet addressed is whether pou2 mediates competence for other Fgfs as well, or indeed for other classes of signaling molecules. The similarities between the acerebellar/fgf8 mutant phenotype and the spg mutant phenotype argues for a relatively high degree of specificity to mediate the effects of Fgf8. By contrast, the differences to the ace mutant phenotype for example in forebrain development or heart development and the pou2 expression pattern argue that pou2 is not a ubiquitous competence factor for Fgf8. Furthermore, our analysis of the spg/ace double mutants, and the comparison between the mutants and Fgf-inhibitor treated embryos, suggests that pou2 also serves roles that are not linked to Fgf(8) signaling. By what molecular mechanism spg/pou2 mediates competence remains undetermined. The Fgf8 bead implantation experiments show that in other tissues or at later stages, spg mutants are able to respond to Fgf8, as evidenced by spry4 expression or dorsalisation, suggesting that the MAP kinase signaling pathway that is thought to mediate the effects of Fgf8 is not generally disrupted in the mutants. An obvious possibility is that Spg/Pou2, as a transcription factor, might control expression of some component of the MAP kinase cascade in a tissue-specific manner. However, at least with respect to the Fgf receptors 1, 3 and 4 we have not detected any abnormal expression in the early hindbrain primordium of spg mutants (G. R., unpublished). POU type homeodomain transcription factors assemble into transcription factor complexes that include, for example, ETS type transcription factors that serve to integrate the activity of several signaling pathways, including Fgf signaling (Fitzsimmons et al., 1996; Raible and Brand, 2001
). Oct4 specifically forms a complex with Ets2, and thus silences transcription of the tau interferon promoter in trophectoderm (Ezashi et al., 2001
). An appealing mechanism of action is therefore that Spg/Pou2 might be necessary to form a stable transcription factor complex that serves as a target for Fgf signaling in downstream gene activation or repression.
spg/pou2 functions during maintenance of the MHB and hindbrain primordium
The lack of pou2 also has consequences for later stages of MHB development. The requirement of spg during the maintenance phase of MHB development can be subdivided into two aspects. During early somitogenesis stages, spg seems required for MHB development along the entire dorsoventral axis at the prospective MHB, as MHB marker expression is lost from this region in mutant embryos, increasing from ventral to dorsal. This difference may reflect a graded requirement for Fgf signaling along the dorsoventral axis (Reifers et al., 1998; Köster et al., 1997
; Carl and Wittbrodt, 1999
). In contrast to ace mutants, however, which exhibit a gradual narrowing of MHB markers from dorsal to ventral, MHB gene expression in spg mutants is completely lost from the ventral part, but always remains detectable in a dorsal patch in the dorsal neural tube. Alternatively, this phenotype may be a later consequence of the early failure of MHB- and hindbrain gene expression domains to fuse at the midline that is already evident by the end of gastrulation. Midline marker gene expression, e.g. of shh, is not altered, raising the possibility that perception of midline signals might be affected in spg/pou2 embryos. During pharyngula stages, we observed that MHB markers recover in their expression in the dorsal-most neural tube. Morphologically, this coincides with a partial dorsal re-formation of the isthmic fold, as reflected by expression of otx2 and zath1. This recovery is observed in both weak and strong spg alleles, suggesting that alternative and pou2-independent regulatory mechanism(s) might exist that allow for later induction of dorsal parts of the MHB.
The second aspect of spg/pou2 function during the maintenance period is related to the specific subdomains in the hindbrain that express pou2. From the beginning of somitogenesis until the seven-somite stage, pou2 is expressed specifically in rhombomeres 2 and 4 of the hindbrain (Takeda et al., 1994; Hauptmann and Gerster, 1995
; Burgess et al., 2002
). In particular, gene expression of krox20, ephA4, wnt8 or val in odd numbered rhombomeres 1, 3 and 5 strongly requires pou2, suggesting that pou2 may act on these rhombomeres in a non-autonomous fashion via a diffusible signal. Notably, fgf8 expression is strongly reduced in r2 and r4, making Fgf8 an excellent candidate for the signal controlled by pou2. The situation is likely to be more complex, as development of the even-numbered rhombomeres itself becomes abnormal, and signaling molecules like Wnt8 in odd-numbered rhombomeres are also affected. In contrast to odd-numbered rhombomeres, which are reduced in size, r2 and 4 are not, yet they show strong downregulation of pou2 expression. Moreover, at late somitogenesis stages, r4 spatially expands at the expense of r3 and 5, as indicated by hoxb1a staining. Furthermore, we found indications that pou2 is necessary to maintain rhombomeric integrity. This is reflected by the loss of fkd3, a marker for inter-rhombomeric boundaries, and by the strongly reduced distance between r4 and 7, which further illustrates the reduced size of r5. A key question that remains to be addressed is of course to what extend the defects in rhombencephalon development during early somitogenesis stages are due to the specific requirement of spg/pou2 within rhombomere 2 and 4, as might be suspected on the basis of its expression, or due to the failure to express early markers of the hindbrain primordium at the end of gastrulation, as we describe here. Similarly, it will be interesting to determine whether pou2 functions directly in proneural gene activation of ngn1 clusters in the rhombencephalon.
One consequence of the failure to specify the MHB and hindbrain primordia properly in spg/pou2 mutants is that these tissues are not or only partially formed in a pharyngula stage embryo. The actual loss of tissue is probably the result of two very different basic mechanisms. The localized cell death we observe in the forming midbrain and hindbrain during late somitogenesis stages may well be a direct consequence of the earlier mis-specification of these tissues. In addition, however, we also observe that neighboring territories to the most strongly affected areas appear expanded in size. This is particularly noticeable for the posterior forebrain (Fig. 4D',E') and more weakly also for the anterior hindbrain, and within the hindbrain for the rhombomeres bordering on the most strongly deleted rhombomeres r2 and r4. The processes maintaining the major brain subdivisions are poorly characterized, but seem to require integrity of neighboring brain regions. Posterior forebrain expansion is, for example, also seen in the murine Pax2/Pax5 double mutants (Schwarz et al., 1997) and in the zebrafish noi/pax2.1 mutants (S. Scholpp and M. B., unpublished), which exhibit loss of the midbrain, the MHB and the cerebellum, coupled to a posterior expansion of the rostral pax6 domain and partial fusion with the pax6 hindbrain domain. This may result from the lack of eng2 and eng3 gene expression in the mutants, as misexpression of engrailed-type genes can suppress forebrain development during chick and Medaka development (Araki and Nakamura, 1999
; Ristoratore et al., 1999
). The lack of MHB expression during mid-late somitogenesis in spg therefore probably contributes to the observed fusion of gene expression domains of forebrain and hindbrain markers as a secondary consequence. Interestingly, however, expansion of forebrain markers is already evident during the establishment phase of the MHB primordium, raising the possibility that pou2 on its own has an active role in suppression of forebrain markers. Better fate maps and proliferation assays will be needed to address this issue further.
Control of totipotency versus differentiation switch
In the accompanying paper (Burgess et al., 2002), we have presented evidence that spg/pou2 is likely to be the zebrafish ortholog of the mammalian Oct3/Oct4/Pou5f1 gene, which is suggested to control totipotency of stem cells, i.e. the inner cell mass or ES cells derived from it, and germline determination (Pesce and Scholer, 2000
). We have not yet addressed a possible function in germline development in spg mutants. A brain-specific function of Oct3/Oct4 is not known for the mouse gene; the conventional deletion of this gene causes developmental arrest of mouse embryogenesis around implantation, which has so far precluded studying a possible later role in neural development. Although it is conceivable that the brain specific function was lost in the mammalian lineage, or was secondarily acquired in the teleost lineage, our results argue that this is less likely to be the case. We find that injection of mouse Oct3/Oct4 mRNA into spg mutant zebrafish embryos rescues pax2.1 expression (Fig. 6H, arrow; Table 1), and that in mice, Oct3/Oct4 is strongly expressed throughout the neural plate until day 8.0-8.5 p.c. (Fig. 6F). However, gene expression is not confined to the midbrain-hindbrain area in mice, as it is seen for the zebrafish ortholog pou2. Either Oct3/Oct4 functions in a different way in the mouse neuroectoderm, or not at all, or the mechanism is slightly different. For example, a pairing partner of Oct3/Oct4, e.g. a Sox or Ets protein, could provide the spatial specificity in the mouse neural plate, which would alleviate the need to restrict expression to the midbrain-hindbrain domain in the mammalian lineage. Regardless of the exact evolutionary origin, the phenotype of spg mutants appears more specific than would be expected for a gene that controls totipotency in all embryonic cells (Pesce and Scholer, 2000
). In zebrafish, spg/pou2 is clearly shut down in much of the neuroectodermal primordium during early somitogenesis stages, and appears to function as a transcriptional regulator for specific target genes in the cells in which it is expressed. Many, but not all cells either begin or have already undergone a significant differentiation at the time when they still express pou2. Therefore, if spg/pou2 were to perform a similar function in controlling totipotency in zebrafish as in mice, this function would very likely be restricted to a specific, early step of differentiation. Instead of controlling totipotency, spg/pou2/Oct3/Oct4 might serve more generally as a switch that controls the ability to respond to signals like Fgf8, and probably other signals of the Fgf subfamily, that act repeatedly during several developmental decisions. It is interesting to note that Fgfs are also important signals in the initial cell divisions of the mouse embryo (Chai et al., 1998
). Accordingly, the decision to follow the embryonic fate, and eventually the germline fate, would be specific to the type of binary decisions controlled by this gene.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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