Chapter 21 The
Genetic Basis of Development
Lecture Outline
Overview: From Single Cell
to Multicellular Organism
·
The
application of genetic analysis and DNA technology to the study of development
has brought about a revolution in our understanding of how a complex
multicellular organism develops from a single cell.
°
In
1995, Swiss researchers identified a gene that functions as a master switch to
trigger the development of the eye in Drosophila.
§
A
similar gene triggers eye development in mammals.
°
Developmental
biologists are discovering remarkable similarities in the mechanisms that shape
diverse organisms.
·
While
geneticists were advancing from Mendel’s laws to an understanding of the
molecular basis of inheritance, developmental biologists were focusing on
embryology.
°
Embryology
is the study of the stages of development leading from fertilized egg to fully
formed organism.
·
In
recent years, the concepts and tools of molecular genetics have reached a point
where a real synthesis of genetics and developmental biology has been possible.
·
When
the primary research goal is to understand broad biological principles, the
organism chosen for study is called a model
organism.
°
Researchers
select model organisms that are representative of a larger group, suitable for
the questions under investigation, and easy to grow in the lab.
·
For
study of the connections between genes and development, suitable model
organisms have short generation times and small genomes that are suitable for
genetic analysis.
°
Model
organisms used in developmental genetics include the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the mouse Mus musculus, the zebra fish Danio rerio, and the plant Arabidopsis thaliana.
·
The
fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster was
first chosen as a model organism by geneticist T. H. Morgan and intensively
studied by generations of geneticists after him.
°
The
fruit fly is small and easily grown in the laboratory.
°
It
has a generation time of only two weeks and produces many offspring.
°
Embryos
develop outside the mother’s body.
°
There
are vast amounts of information on its genes and other aspects of its biology.
°
However,
because first rounds of mitosis occur without cytokinesis, parts of its
development are superficially quite different from that of other organisms.
°
Sequencing
of the Drosophila genome was
completed in 2000.
§
It
has 180 × 106 base pairs (180 Mb) and contains about 13,700 genes.
·
The
nematode Caenorhabditis elegans
normally lives in the soil but is easily grown in petri dishes.
°
Only
a millimeter long, it has a simple, transparent body with only a few cell types
and grows from zygote to mature adult in only three and a half days.
°
Its
genome has been sequenced. It is 97 Mb long and contains an estimated 19,000
genes.
°
Because
individuals are hermaphrodites, it is easy to detect recessive mutations.
§
Self-fertilization
of heterozygotes produces some homozygous recessive offspring with mutant
phenotypes.
°
Every
adult C. elegans has exactly 959
somatic cells.
§
These
arise from the zygote in virtually the same way for every individual.
§
By
following all cell divisions with a microscope, biologists have constructed the
organism’s complete cell lineage, showing the ancestry of every cell in the
adult body.
·
The
mouse Mus musculus has a long history
as a mammalian model of development.
°
Much
is known about its biology.
°
The
mouse genome is about 2,600 Mb long with about 25,000 genes, about the same as
the human genome.
°
Researchers
are adept at manipulating mouse genes to make transgenic mice and mice in which
particular genes are “knocked out” by mutation.
°
Mice
are complex animals with a genome as large as ours.
§
Their
embryos develop in the mother’s uterus, hidden from view.
·
A
second vertebrate model, the zebra fish Danio
rerio, has some unique advantages.
°
These
small fish (2–4 cm long) are easy to breed in the laboratory in large numbers.
°
The
transparent embryos develop outside the mother’s body.
°
Although
generation time is two to four months, the early stages of development proceed
quickly.
§
By
24 hours after fertilization, most tissues and early versions of the organs
have formed.
§
After
two days, the fish hatches out of the egg case.
§
The
zebra fish genome is estimated to be 1,700 Mb, and is still being mapped and
sequenced.
·
For
studying the molecular genetics of plant development, researchers are focusing
on a small weed, Arabidopsis thaliana
(a member of the mustard family).
°
One
plant can grow and produce thousands of progeny after eight to ten weeks.
°
A
hermaphrodite, each flower makes eggs and sperm.
°
For
gene manipulation research, scientists can induce cultured cells to take up
foreign DNA (genetic transformation).
°
Its
relatively small genome, about 118 Mb, contains an estimated 25,500 genes.
·
In
the development of most multicellular organisms, a single-celled zygote gives
rise to cells of many different types.
°
Each
type has a different structure and corresponding function.
·
Cells
of similar types are organized into tissues, tissues into organs, organs into
organ systems, and organ systems into the whole organism.
·
Thus,
the process of embryonic development must give rise not only to cells of
different types, but also to higher-level structures arranged in a particular
way in three dimensions.
Concept 21.1 Embryonic development involves cell
division, cell differentiation, and morphogenesis
·
An
organism arises from a fertilized egg cell as the result of three interrelated
processes: cell division, cell differentiation, and morphogenesis.
·
Through
a succession of mitotic cell divisions, the zygote gives rise to a large number
of cells.
°
Cell
division alone would produce only a great ball of identical cells.
·
During
development, cells become specialized in structure and function, undergoing cell differentiation.
·
Different
kinds of cells are organized into tissues and organs.
·
The
physical processes that give an organism its shape constitute morphogenesis, the “creation of form.”
·
The
processes of cell division, differentiation, and morphogenesis overlap during
development.
·
Early
events of morphogenesis lay out the basic body plan very early in embryonic
development.
°
These
include establishing the head of an animal embryo or the roots of a plant
embryo.
°
Later
morphogenetic events establish relative locations within smaller regions of the
embryo, such as the digits on a vertebrate limb.
·
The
overall schemes of morphogenesis in animals and plants are very different.
°
In
animals, but not in plants, movements
of cells and tissues are necessary to transform the embryo into the
characteristic 3-D form of the organism.
°
In
plants, morphogenesis and growth in overall size are not limited to embryonic
and juvenile periods but occur throughout the life of the plant.
·
Apical meristems, perpetually embryonic
regions in the tips of shoots and roots, are responsible for the plant’s
continual growth and formation of new organs, such as leaves and roots.
·
In
animals, ongoing development in adults is restricted to the generation of
cells, such as blood cells, that must be continually replenished.
Concept 21.2 Different cell types result from differential gene
expression in cells with the same DNA
·
During
differentiation and morphogenesis, embryonic cells behave and function in ways
different from one another, even though all of them have arisen from the same
zygote.
·
The
differences between cells in a multicellular organism come almost entirely from
differences in gene expression, not
differences in the cell’s genomes.
·
These
differences arise during development, as regulatory mechanisms turn specific
genes off and on.
Different types of cells in an organism have
the same DNA.
·
Much
evidence supports the conclusion that nearly all the cells of an organism have genomic equivalence—that is, they all
have the same genes.
·
An
important question that emerges is whether genes are irreversibly inactivated
during differentiation.
·
One
experimental approach to the question of genomic equivalence is to try to
generate a whole organism from differentiated cells of a single type.
°
In
many plants, whole new organisms can
develop from differentiated somatic cells.
°
During
the 1950s, F. C. Steward and his students found that differentiated root cells
removed from the root could grow into normal adult plants when placed in a
medium culture.
·
These
cloning experiments produced
genetically identical individuals, popularly called clones.
·
The
fact that a mature plant cell can dedifferentiate (reverse its function) and
give rise to all the different kinds of specialized cells of a new plant shows
that differentiation does not necessarily involve irreversible changes in the
DNA.
·
In
plants, at least, cells can remain totipotent.
°
They
retain the zygote’s potential to form all parts of the mature organism.
·
Plant
cloning is now used extensively in agriculture.
·
Differentiated
cells from animals often fail to divide in culture, much less develop into a
new organism.
·
Animal
researchers have approached the genomic equivalence question by replacing the
nucleus of an unfertilized egg or zygote with the nucleus of a differentiated
cell.
°
The
pioneering experiments in nuclear transplantation were carried out by
Robert Briggs and Thomas King in the 1950s and extended later by John Gordon in
the 1980s.
°
They
destroyed or removed the nucleus of a frog egg and transplanted a nucleus from
an embryonic or tadpole cell from the same species into an enucleated egg.
·
The
ability of the transplanted nucleus to support normal development is inversely
related to the donor’s age.
°
Transplanted
nuclei from relatively undifferentiated cells from an early embryo lead to the
development of most eggs into tadpoles.
°
Transplanted
nuclei from fully differentiated intestinal cells lead to fewer than 2% of the
cells developing into normal tadpoles.
§
Most
of the embryos failed to make it through even the earliest stages of
development.
·
Developmental
biologists agree on several conclusions about these results.
°
First,
nuclei do change in some ways as
cells differentiate.
§
While
the DNA sequences do not change, histones may be modified or DNA may be
methylated.
°
In
frogs and most other animals, nuclear “potency” tends to be restricted more and
more as embryonic development and cell differentiation progress.
§
However,
chromatin changes are sometimes reversible, and the nuclei of most
differentiated animal cells probably have all the genes required for making an
entire organism.
·
The
ability to clone mammals using nuclei or cells from early embryos has long been
possible.
·
In
1997, Scottish researchers announced the birth of Dolly, a lamb cloned from an
adult sheep by nuclear transplantation from a differentiated mammary cell.
·
The
mammary cells were fused with sheep egg cells whose nuclei had been removed.
°
The
resulting cells divided to form early embryos, which were implanted into
surrogate mothers.
·
One
of several hundred implanted embryos completed normal development.
·
In
2003, Dolly developed a lung disease usually seen in much older sheep and was
euthanized.
°
Dolly’s
premature death as well as her arthritis led to speculation that her cells were
older than those of a normal sheep, possibly reflecting incomplete
reprogramming of the original transplanted nucleus.
·
Since
1997, cloning has been demonstrated in numerous mammals, including mice, cats,
cows, horses, and pigs.
·
The
possibility of cloning humans raises unprecedented ethical issues.
°
In
most cases, the goal is to produce new individuals.
°
This
is known as reproductive cloning.
·
These
experiments have led to some interesting results.
°
Cloned
animals in the same species do not look or behave identically.
°
Clearly,
environmental influences and random phenomena can play a significant role
during development.
·
The
successful cloning of various mammals raised interest in human cloning.
°
In
early 2004, South Korean researchers reported success in the first step of
reproductive cloning of humans.
°
Nuclei
from differentiated human cells were transplanted into unfertilized enucleated
eggs.
§
The
eggs divided, and some embryos reached the blastocyst
stage before development was halted.
·
In
most nuclear transplantation studies, only a small percentage of cloned embryos
develop normally to birth.
°
Like
Dolly, many cloned animals have various defects, such as obesity, pneumonia,
liver failure, and premature death.
·
In
the nuclei of fully differentiated cells, a small subset of genes is turned on
and the expression of the rest is repressed.
°
This
regulation is often the result of epigenetic changes in chromatin, such as the
acetylation of histones or the methylation of DNA.
°
Many
of these changes must be reversed in the nucleus of the donor animal in order
for genes to be expressed or repressed appropriately for early stages of development.
°
Researchers
have found that the DNA in embryonic cells from cloned embryos, like that of
differentiated cells, often has more methyl groups than does the DNA in
equivalent cells from uncloned embryos of the same species.
°
Because
DNA methylation helps regulate gene expression, methylated DNA of donor nuclei
may interfere with the pattern of gene expression necessary for normal
embryonic development.
·
Another
hot research area involves stem cells.
°
A
stem cell is a relatively unspecialized cell that can reproduce itself and,
under appropriate conditions, differentiate into specialized cell types.
·
In
addition to contributing to the study of differentiation, stem cell research
has enormous potential in medicine.
°
The
ultimate goal is to supply cells for the repair of damaged or diseased organs.
°
For
example, providing insulin-producing pancreatic cells to diabetics or certain
brain cells to individuals with Parkinson’s disease could cure these diseases.
·
Many
early animal embryos contain totipotent
stem cells, which can give rise to differentiated cells of any type.
°
In
culture, these embryonic stem cells
reproduce indefinitely and can differentiate into various specialized cells.
·
The
adult body has various kinds of stem cells, which replace nonreproducing specialized
cells.
°
Adult
stem cells are said to be pluripotent,
able to give rise to many, but not all, cell types.
§
For
example, stem cells in the bone marrow give rise to all the different kinds of
blood cells.
°
The
adult brain contains stem cells that continue to produce certain kinds of nerve
cells.
°
Although
adult animals have only tiny numbers of stem cells, scientists are learning to
identify, isolate, and culture these cells from various tissues.
§
Under
some culture conditions, with the addition of specific growth factors, cultured
adult stem cells can differentiate into multiple types of specialized cells.
°
Stem
cells from early embryos are somewhat easier to culture than those from adults
and can produce differentiated cells of any type.
§
Embryonic
stem cells are currently obtained from embryos donated by parents undergoing
fertility treatments, or from long-term cell cultures originally established
with cells isolated from donated embryos.
§
Because
the cells are derived from human embryos, their use raises ethical and
political issues.
§
With
the recent cloning of human embryos to the blastocyst stage, scientists might
be able to use these clones as the source of embryonic stem cells in the
future.
§
When
the major aim of cloning is to produce embryonic stem cells to treat disease,
the process is called therapeutic
cloning.
à
Opinions
vary about the morality of therapeutic cloning.
Different cell types make different proteins,
usually as a result of transcriptional regulation.
·
During
embryonic development, cells become visibly different in structure and function
as they differentiate.
·
The
earliest changes that set a cell on a path to specialization show up only at
the molecular level.
·
Molecular
changes in the embryo drive the process, termed determination, which leads up to observable differentiation of a
cell.
°
At
the end of this process, an embryonic cell is irreversibly committed to its final fate.
°
If
a determined cell is experimentally placed in another location in the embryo,
it will differentiate as if it were in its original position.
·
The
outcome of determination—cell differentiation—is caused by the expression of
genes that encode tissue-specific
proteins.
°
These
give a cell its characteristic structure and function.
°
Differentiation
begins with the appearance of mRNA and is finally observable in the microscope
as changes in cellular structure.
·
In
most cases, the pattern of gene expression in a differentiated cell is
controlled at the level of transcription.
·
Cells
produce the proteins that allow them to carry out their specialized roles in
the organism.
°
For
example, lens cells, and only lens cells, devote 80% of their capacity for
protein synthesis to making just one type of protein, crystallin proteins.
§
These
form transparent fibers that allow the lens to transmit and focus light.
°
Similarly,
skeletal muscle cells have high concentrations of proteins specific to muscle
tissues, such as a muscle-specific version of the contractile protein myosin
and the structural protein actin.
§
They
also have membrane receptor proteins that detect signals from nerve cells.
·
Muscle
cells develop from embryonic precursors that have the potential to develop into
a number of alternative cell types, including cartilage cells, fat cells, or
multinucleate muscle cells.
°
As
the muscle cells differentiate, they become myoblasts
and begin to synthesize muscle-specific proteins.
°
They
fuse to form mature, elongated, multinucleate skeletal muscle cells.
·
Researchers
developed the hypothesis that certain muscle-specific regulatory genes are
active in myoblasts, leading to muscle cell determination.
°
To
test this, researchers isolated mRNA from cultured myoblasts and used reverse
transcriptase to prepare a cDNA library containing all the genes that are
expressed in cultured myoblasts.
°
Transplanting
these cloned genes into embryonic precursor cells led to the identification of
several “master regulatory genes” that, when transcribed and translated, commit
the cells to become skeletal muscle.
·
One
of these master regulatory genes is called myoD,
a transcription factor.
°
myoD encodes MyoD protein,
which binds to specific control elements and stimulates the transcription of
various genes, including some that encode for other muscle-specific
transcription factors.
§
These
secondary transcription factors activate the muscle protein genes.
§
MyoD
also stimulates expression of the myoD
gene itself, perpetuating its effect in maintaining the cell’s differentiated
state.
·
MyoD
protein is capable of changing fully differentiated nonmuscle cells into muscle
cells.
·
However,
not all cells will transform.
°
Nontransforming
cells may lack a combination of
regulatory proteins, in addition to MyoD.
Transcriptional regulation is directed by
maternal molecules in the cytoplasm and signals from other cells.
·
Two
sources of information “tell” a cell, such as a myoblast or even the zygote,
which genes to express at any given time.
·
One
source of information is the cytoplasm of the unfertilized egg cell, which
contains RNA and protein molecules encoded by the mother’s DNA.
°
Messenger
RNA, proteins, other substances, and organelles are distributed unevenly in the
unfertilized egg.
°
This
impacts embryonic development in many species.
·
Maternal
substances that influence the course of early development are called cytoplasmic determinants.
°
These
substances regulate the expression of genes that affect the developmental fate
of the cell.
°
After
fertilization, the cell nuclei resulting from mitotic division of the zygote
are exposed to different cytoplasmic environments.
§
The
set of cytoplasmic determinants a particular cell receives helps determine its
developmental fate by regulating expression of the cell’s genes during the
course of cell differentiation.
·
The
other important source of developmental information is the environment around
the cell, especially signals impinging on an embryonic cell from other nearby
embryonic cells.
°
In
animals, these include contact with cell-surface molecules on neighboring cells
and the binding of growth factors secreted by neighboring cells.
°
In
plants, the cell-cell junctions known as plasmodesmata allow signal molecules
to pass from one cell to another.
§
The
synthesis of these signals is controlled by the embryo’s own genes.
·
These
signal molecules cause induction,
triggering observable cellular changes by causing a change in gene expression
in the target cell.
Concept 21.3 Pattern formation in animals and plants results from
similar genetic and cellular mechanisms
·
Before
morphogenesis can shape an animal or plant, the organism’s body plan must be established.
·
Cytoplasmic
determinants and inductive signals contribute to pattern formation, the development of spatial organization in which the tissues and organs of an organism
are all in their characteristic places.
°
Pattern
formation continues throughout the life of a plant in the apical meristems.
°
In
animals, pattern formation is mostly limited to embryos and juveniles.
·
Pattern
formation begins in the early embryo, when the major axes of an animal and the
root-shoot axis of the plant are established.
°
The
molecular cues that control pattern formation, positional information, tell a cell its location relative to the
body axes and to neighboring cells.
°
They
also determine how the cells and their progeny will respond to future molecular
signals.
Drosophila development is controlled by a
cascade of gene activations.
·
Pattern
formation has been most extensively studied in Drosophila melanogaster,
where genetic approaches have had spectacular success.
°
These
studies have established that genes control development and have identified the
key roles that specific molecules play in defining position and directing
differentiation.
°
Combining
anatomical, genetic, and biochemical approaches in the study of Drosophila development, researchers have
discovered developmental principles common to many other species, including
humans.
·
Fruit
flies and other arthropods have a modular construction, an ordered series of
segments.
°
These
segments make up the three major body parts: the head, thorax (with wings and
legs), and abdomen.
°
Like
other bilaterally symmetrical animals, Drosophila
has an anterior-posterior axis and a dorsal-ventral axis.
§
Cytoplasmic
determinants in the unfertilized egg provide positional information for the two
developmental axes before fertilization.
°
After
fertilization, positional information establishes a specific number of
correctly oriented segments and finally triggers the formation of each
segment’s characteristic structures.
°
The
Drosophila egg cell develops in the
female’s ovary, surrounded by ovarian cells called nurse cells and follicle
cells that supply the egg cell with nutrients, mRNAs, and other substances
needed for development.
·
Development
of the fruit fly from egg cell to adult fly occurs in a series of discrete
stages.
1.
Mitosis
follows fertilization and egg laying.
°
Early
mitosis occurs without growth of the cytoplasm and without cytokinesis,
producing one big multinucleate cell.
2.
At
the tenth nuclear division, the nuclei begin to migrate to the periphery of the
embryo.
3.
At
division 13, the cytoplasm partitions the 6,000 or so nuclei into separate
cells.
°
The
basic body plan—including body axes and segment boundaries—has already been
determined by this time.
°
A
central yolk nourishes the embryo, and the eggshell continues to protect it.
4.
Subsequent
events in the embryo create clearly visible segments, which at first look very
much alike.
5.
Some
cells move to new positions, organs form, and a wormlike larva hatches from the
shell.
°
During
three larval stages, the larva eats, grows, and molts.
6.
During
the third larval stage, the larva transforms into the pupa enclosed in a case.
7.
Metamorphosis,
the change from larva to adult fly, occurs in the pupal case, and the fly
emerges.
°
Each
segment is anatomically distinct, with characteristic appendages.
·
The
results of detailed anatomical observations of development in several species
and experimental manipulations of embryonic tissues laid the groundwork for
understanding the mechanisms of development.
·
In
the 1940s, Edward B. Lewis demonstrated that the study of mutants could be used
to investigate Drosophila
development.
·
He
studied bizarre developmental mutations and located the mutations on the fly’s
genetic map.
·
This
research provided the first concrete evidence that genes somehow direct the
developmental process.
·
In
the late 1970s, Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard and Eric Weischaus pushed the
understanding of early pattern formation to the molecular level.
·
Their
goal was to identify all the genes
that affect segmentation in Drosophila,
but they faced three problems.
°
Because
Drosophila has about 13,700 genes,
there could be only a few genes affecting segmentation or so many that the
pattern would be impossible to discern.
°
Mutations
that affect segmentation are likely to be embryonic
lethals, leading to death at the embryonic or larval stage.
§
Because
flies with embryonic lethal mutations never reproduce, they cannot be bred for
study.
°
Because
of maternal effects on axis formation in the egg, researchers also need to
study maternal genes.
·
Nüsslein-Volhard
and Wieschaus focused on recessive mutations that could be propagated in
heterozygous flies.
°
After
mutating flies, they looked for dead embryos and larvae with abnormal
segmentation among the fly’s descendents.
°
Through
appropriate crosses, they could identify living heterozygotes carrying
embryonic lethal mutations.
°
They
hoped that the segmental abnormalities would suggest how the affected genes
normally functioned.
·
Nüsslein-Volhard
and Wieschaus identified 1,200 genes essential for embryonic development.
°
About
120 of these were essential for pattern formation leading to normal
segmentation.
°
After
several years, they were able to group the genes by general function, map them,
and clone many of them.
·
Their
results, combined with Lewis’s early work, created a coherent picture of Drosophila development.
°
In
1995, Nüsslein-Volhard, Wieschaus, and Lewis were awarded the Nobel Prize.
Gradients of maternal molecules in the early
embryo control axis formation.
·
Cytoplasmic
determinants establish the axes of the Drosophila
body.
°
Substances
are produced under the direction of maternal
effect genes that are deposited in the unfertilized egg.
§
When
a maternal effect gene is mutated, the offspring has an abnormal mutant
phenotype.
·
In
fruit fly development, maternal effect genes encode proteins or mRNA that are
placed in the egg while it is still in the ovary.
°
When
the mother has a mutated gene, she makes a defective gene product (or none at
all), and her eggs will not develop properly when fertilized.
·
These
maternal effect genes are also called egg-polarity
genes, because they control the orientation of the egg and consequently the
fly.
°
One
group of genes sets up the anterior-posterior axis, while a second group
establishes the dorsal-ventral axis.
·
One
of these, the bicoid gene, affects
the front half of the body.
·
An
embryo whose mother has a mutant bicoid
gene lacks the front half of its body and has duplicate posterior structures at
both ends.
°
This
suggests that the product of the mother’s bicoid
gene is essential for setting up the anterior end of the fly.
°
It
also suggests that the gene’s products are concentrated at the future anterior
end.
·
This
is a specific version of a general
gradient hypothesis, in which gradients of morphogens establish an embryo’s axes and other features.
·
Using
DNA technology and biochemical methods, researchers were able to clone the bicoid gene and use it as a probe for bicoid mRNA in the egg.
°
As
predicted, the bicoid mRNA is
concentrated at the extreme anterior end of the egg cell.
·
After
the egg is fertilized, bicoid mRNA is
transcribed into bicoid protein, which diffuses from the anterior end toward
the posterior, resulting in a gradient of proteins in the early embryo.
·
Injections
of pure bicoid mRNA into various
regions of early embryos results in the formation of anterior structures at the
injection sites as the mRNA is translated into protein.
·
The
bicoid research is important for
three reasons.
1.
It
identified a specific protein required for some of the earliest steps in
pattern formation.
2.
It
increased our understanding of the mother’s role in development of an embryo.
°
As
one developmental biologist put it, “Mom tells Junior which way is up.”
3.
It
demonstrated a key developmental principle that a gradient of molecules can
determine polarity and position in the embryo.
·
Gradients
of specific proteins determine the posterior end as well as the anterior and
also are responsible for establishing the dorsal-ventral axis.
A cascade of gene activations sets up the
segmentation pattern in Drosophila.
·
The
bicoid protein and other morphogens
are transcription factors that regulate the activity of some of the embryo’s
own genes.
·
Gradients
of these morphogens bring about regional differences in the expression of segmentation genes, the genes that
direct the actual formation of segments after the embryo’s major axes are
defined.
·
In
a cascade of gene activations, sequential activation of three sets of
segmentation genes provides the positional information for increasingly fine
details of the body plan.
°
The
three sets are called gap genes, pair-rule genes, and segment polarity genes.
·
The
products of many segmentation genes are transcription factors that directly
activate the next set of genes in the hierarchical scheme of pattern formation.
·
Other
segmentation proteins operate more indirectly.
°
Some
are components of cell-signaling pathways, including signal molecules used in
cell-cell communication and the membrane receptors that recognize them.
·
Working
together, the products of egg-polarity genes such as bicoid regulate the regional expression of gap genes, which control
the localized expression of pair-rule genes, which in turn activate specific
segment polarity genes in different parts of each segment.
·
The
boundaries and axes of segments are set by this hierarchy of genes (and their
products).
Homeotic genes direct the identity of body
parts.
·
In
a normal fly, structures such as antennae, legs, and wings develop on the
appropriate segments.
·
The
anatomical identity of the segments is controlled by master regulatory genes,
the homeotic genes.
·
Discovered
by Edward Lewis, these genes specify the types of appendages and other
structures that each segment will form.
·
Mutations
to homeotic genes produce flies with such strange traits as legs growing from
the head in place of antennae.
°
Structures
characteristic of a particular part of the animal arise in the wrong place.
·
Like
other developmental genes, the homeotic genes encode transcription factors that
control the expression of genes responsible for specific anatomical structures.
°
For
example, a homeotic protein made in a thoracic segment may activate genes that
bring about leg development, while a homeotic protein in a certain head segment
activates genes for antennal development.
°
A
mutant version of this protein may label a segment as “thoracic” instead of
“head,” causing legs to develop in place of antennae.
·
Scientists
are now working to identify the genes activated by the homeotic proteins—the
genes specifying the proteins that actually build the fly structures.
·
Amazingly,
many of the molecules and mechanisms that regulate development in the Drosophila embryo have close
counterparts throughout the animal kingdom.
Neighboring cells instruct other cells to form
particular structures: cell signaling and induction in the nematode.
·
The
development of a multicellular organism requires close communication among
cells.
°
Signals
generated by neighboring nurse cells trigger the localization of bicoid mRNA in the egg of the Drosophila.
·
Once
the embryo is truly multicellular, cells signal nearby cells to change in a
specific way, in a process called induction.
°
Induction
brings about cell differentiation through transcriptional regulation of
specific genes.
·
The
nematode C. elegans has proved to be
a very useful model organism for investigating the roles of cell signaling,
induction, and programmed cell death in development.
·
Researchers
know the entire ancestry of every cell in the body of an adult C. elegans—the organism’s complete cell lineage.
·
As
early as the four-cell stage in C.
elegans, cell signaling helps direct daughter cells down appropriate
pathways.
·
Researchers
have combined genetic, biochemical, and embryological approaches to study the
development of the vulva, through
which the worm lays its eggs.
·
The
pathway from fertilized egg to adult nematode involves four larval stages (during
which the larvae look much like smaller versions of the adult) during which
this structure develops.
°
Already
present on the ventral surface of the second-stage larva are six cells from
which the vulva will arise.
°
A
single cell in the embryonic gonad, the anchor
cell, initiates a cascade of signals that establishes the fate of the six
vulval precursor cells.
°
If
an experimenter destroys the anchor cell with a laser beam, the vulva fails to
form and the precursor cells simply become part of the worm’s epidermis.
·
Secreted
factors or cell-surface proteins bind to receptors on the recipient cell,
initiating intracellular signal transduction pathways.
·
This
example illustrates a number of important concepts that apply to development of
C. elegans and many other animals.
°
In
the developing embryo, sequential inductions drive organ formation.
°
The
effect of an inducer can depend on its concentration.
°
Inducers
produce their effects via signal transduction pathways similar to those
operating in adult cells.
°
The
induced cell’s response is often the activation of genes—transcriptional
regulation—that, in turn, establishes a pattern of gene activity characteristic
of a particular kind of differentiated cell.
·
Lineage
analysis of C. elegans highlights
another outcome of cell signaling, programmed cell death, or apoptosis.
°
The
timely suicide of cells occurs exactly 131 times in the course of C. elegans’s normal development.
°
At
precisely the same points in development, signals trigger the activation of a
cascade of “suicide” proteins in the cells destined to die.
·
During
apoptosis, a cell shrinks and becomes lobed (called “blebbing”), the nucleus
condenses, and the DNA is fragmented.
°
Neighboring
cells quickly engulf and digest the membrane-bound remains, leaving no trace.
·
Genetic
screening of C. elegans has revealed
two key apoptosis genes, ced-3 and ced-4 (ced stands for cell death), which encode proteins (Ced-3 and Ced-4)
that are essential for apoptosis.
·
In
C. elegans, a protein in the outer
mitochondrial membrane called Ced-9 (the product of ced-9) is a master regulator of apoptosis.
°
ced-9 acts as a brake in the
absence of a signal promoting apoptosis.
·
When
the cell receives an external death signal, Ced-9 is inactivated, allowing both
Ced-4 and Ced-3 to be active.
°
The
apoptosis pathway activates proteases and nucleases to cut up the proteins and
DNA of the cell.
·
The
main proteases of apoptosis are called caspases.
°
In
nematodes, Ced-3 is the chief caspase—the main protease of apoptosis.
·
Apoptosis
is regulated not at the level of transcription or translation, but through
changes in the activity of proteins
that are continually present in the cell.
·
Apoptosis
pathways in humans and other mammals are more complicated.
·
Research
on mammals has revealed a prominent role for mitochondria in apoptosis.
°
Signals
from apoptosis pathways or others somehow cause the outer mitochondrial
membrane to leak, releasing proteins that promote apoptosis.
§
Surprisingly,
these proteins include cytochrome c,
which functions in mitochondrial electron transport in healthy cells but acts
as a cell death factor when released from mitochondria.
°
Still
controversial is whether mitochondria play a central role in apoptosis or only
a subsidiary role.
·
A
cell must make a life-or-death “decision” by somehow integrating both the
“death” and “life” (growth factor) signals that it receives.
·
A
built-in cell suicide mechanism is essential to development in all animals.
°
Similarities
between the apoptosis genes in mammals and nematodes, as well as the
observation that apoptosis occurs in multicellular fungi and unicellular yeast,
indicate that the basic mechanism evolved early in animal evolution.
°
The
timely activation of apoptosis proteins in some cells functions during normal
development and growth in both embryos and adults.
§
It
is part of the normal development of the nervous system, normal operation of
the immune system, and normal morphogenesis of human hands and feet.
·
A
low level of apoptosis in developing limbs accounts for the webbed feet of
ducks.
·
Problems
with the cell suicide mechanism may have health consequences, ranging from
minor to serious.
°
Failure
of normal cell death during morphogenesis of the hands and feet can result in
webbed fingers and toes.
°
Researchers
are also investigating the possibility that certain degenerative diseases of
the nervous system result from inappropriate activation of the apoptosis genes.
°
Others
are investigating the possibility that some cancers result from a failure of
cell suicide that normally occurs if the cell has suffered irreparable damage,
especially DNA damage.
§
Damaged
cells normally generate internal
signals that trigger apoptosis.
Plant development depends on cell signaling
and transcriptional regulation.
·
The
genetic analysis of plant development, using model organisms such as Arabidopsis, has lagged behind that of
animal models.
°
Biologists
are just beginning to understand the molecular basis of plant development.
·
In
general, cell linage is less important for pattern formation in plants than in
animals.
°
Many
plant cells are totipotent, and their fates depend more on positional
information than on cell lineage.
·
Plant
development, like that of animals, depends on cell signaling (induction) and
transcriptional regulation.
·
The
embryonic development of most plants occurs in seeds that are relatively
inaccessible to study.
·
However,
other important aspects of plant development are observable in plant meristems,
particularly the apical meristems at the tips of shoots.
°
These
give rise to new organs, such as leaves or the petals of flowers.
·
Environmental
signals (such as day length or temperature) trigger signal transduction
pathways that convert ordinary shoot meristems to floral meristems.
°
A
floral meristem is a “bump” with three cell layers, all of which participate in
the formation of a flower with four types of organs: carpels (containing egg cells), petals,
stamens (containing sperm-bearing pollen), and sepals (leaflike structures outside the petals).
·
To
examine induction of the floral meristem, researchers grafted stems from a
mutant tomato plant onto a wild-type plant and then grew new plants from the
shoots at the graft sites.
°
Plants
homozygous for the mutant allele fasciated
(f) produce flowers with an
abnormally large number of organs.
·
The
new plants were chimeras, organisms
with a mixture of genetically different cells.
·
Some
of the chimeras produced floral meristems in which the three cell layers did
not all come from the same “parent.”
·
The
number of organs per flower depends on genes of the L3 (innermost) cell layer.
°
This
induces the L2 and L1 layers to form that number of organs.
·
In
contrast to genes controlling organ number
in flowers, genes controlling organ identity
(organ identity genes) determine the
types of structure that will grow from a meristem.
·
In
Arabidopsis and other plants, organ
identity genes are analogous to homeotic genes in animals and are often
referred to as plant homeotic genes.
°
Mutations
cause plant structures to grow in unusual places, such as carpels in the place
of sepals.
·
Researchers
have identified and cloned a number of floral identity genes, and they are
beginning to determine how they act.
°
In
plants with a “homeotic” mutation, specific organs are missing or repeated.
°
Like
the homeotic genes of animals, the organ identity genes of plants encode
transcription factors that regulate specific target genes by binding to their
enhancers in the DNA.
Concept 21.4 Comparative studies help explain how
the evolution of development leads to morphological diversity
·
Biologists
in the field of evolutionary developmental biology, or “evo-devo,” compare
developmental processes of different multicellular organisms.
°
Their
aim is to understand how developmental processes have evolved and how changes
in the processes can modify existing organismal features or lead to new ones.
°
Biologists
are finding that the genomes of related species with strikingly different forms
may have only minor differences in gene sequence or regulation.
·
All
homeotic genes of Drosophila include
a 180-nucleotide sequence called the homeobox,
which specifies a 60-amino-acid homeodomain.
°
An
identical, or very similar, sequence of nucleotides (often called Hox genes) is found in many other
animals, including humans.
°
The
vertebrate genes homologous to the homeotic genes of fruit flies have even kept
their chromosomal arrangement.
°
Related
sequences have been found in the regulatory genes of plants, yeasts, and even
prokaryotes.
·
The
homeobox DNA sequence must have evolved very early in the history of life and
is sufficiently valuable that it has been conserved virtually unchanged in
animals and plants for hundreds of millions of years.
·
Most,
but not all, homeobox-containing genes are homeotic genes that are associated
with development.
°
For
example, in Drosophila, homeoboxes
are present not only in the homeotic genes, but also in the egg-polarity gene bicoid, in several segmentation genes,
and in the master regulatory gene for eye development.
·
The
homeobox-encoded homeodomain is part of a protein that binds to DNA when the
protein functions as a transcriptional regulator.
°
However,
the shape of the homeodomain allows it to bind to any DNA segment.
°
Other,
more variable, domains of the overall protein determine which genes it will
regulate.
°
Interaction
of these latter domains with still other transcription factors helps a
homeodomain-protein recognize specific enhancers in the DNA.
·
Proteins
with homeodomains probably regulate development by coordinating the
transcription of batteries of developmental genes.
°
In
Drosophila, different combinations of
homeobox genes are active in different parts of the embryo and at different
times, leading to pattern formation.
·
Many
other genes involved in development are highly conserved from species to
species.
°
These
include numerous genes encoding components of signaling pathways.
·
How
can the same genes be involved in the development of so many different animals?
°
In
some cases, small changes in regulatory sequences of particular genes can lead
to major changes in body form.
°
For
example, varying expression of the Hox
genes along the body axis produce different numbers of leg-bearing segments in
insects and crustaceans.
·
Plants
also have homeobox-containing genes.
°
However,
they do not appear to function as master regulatory switches in plants.
°
Other
genes appear to be responsible for pattern formation in plants.
There are some basic similarities—and many
differences—in the development of plants and animals.
·
The
last common ancestor of plants and animals was a single-celled microbe living
hundreds of millions of years ago, so the processes of development evolved
independently in the two lineages.
°
Plants
have rigid cell walls that prevent cell movement, while morphogenetic movements
are very important in animals.
°
Morphogenesis
in plants is dependent on differing planes of cell division and selective cell
enlargement.
·
Nevertheless,
there are some basic similarities of development.
°
In
both plants and animals, development relies on a cascade of transcriptional
regulators turning on or off genes in a finely tuned series.
·
The
genes that direct these processes are very different in plants and animals.
°
Quite
a few of the master regulatory switches in Drosophila
are homeobox-containing Hox genes.
°
Those
in Arabidopsis belong to the Mads-box family of genes.
·
Although
homeobox-containing genes can be found in plants and Mads-box genes can be found in animals, they do not play the same
major roles in development in plants and animals.
·
The
unity of life is reflected in the similarity of biological mechanisms used to
establish body pattern, although the exact genes directing develop may differ.
·
The
similarities reflect the common ancestry of life on Earth, while the
differences have created the diversity of living organisms.