The Ciona intestinalis larva has two distinct photoreceptor organs, a conventional pigmented ocellus and a nonpigmented ocellus, that are asymmetrically situated in the brain. The ciliary photoreceptor cells of these ocelli resemble visual cells of the vertebrate retina. Precise elucidation of the lineage of the photoreceptor cells will be key to understanding the developmental mechanisms of these cells as well as the evolutionary relationships between the photoreceptor organs of ascidians and vertebrates. Photoreceptor cells of the pigmented ocellus have been thought to develop from anterior animal (a-lineage) blastomeres, whereas the developmental origin of the nonpigmented ocellus has not been determined. Here, we show that the photoreceptor cells of both ocelli develop from the right anterior vegetal hemisphere: those of the pigmented ocellus from the right A9.14 cell and those of the nonpigmented ocellus from the right A9.16 cell. The pigmented ocellus is formed by a combination of two lineages of cells with distinct embryonic origins: the photoreceptor cells originate from a medial portion of the A-lineage neural plate, while the pigment cell originates from the lateral edge of the a-lineage neural plate. In light of the recently proposed close evolutionary relationship between the ocellus pigment cell of ascidians and the cephalic neural crest of vertebrates, the ascidian ocellus may represent a prototypic contribution of the neural crest to a cranial sensory organ.
Asymmetric localization of RNA is a widely observed mechanism of cell polarization. Using embryos of the ascidian, Halocynthia roretzi, we previously showed that mesoderm and endoderm fates are separated by localization of mRNA encoding a transcription factor, Not, to the future mesoderm-side cytoplasm of the mesendoderm cell through asymmetric positioning of the nucleus. Here, we investigated the mechanism that defines the direction of the nuclear migration. We show that localization of PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 to the future mesoderm region determines the direction of nuclear migration. Localization of PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 was dependent on the localization of PI3Kα to the future mesoderm region. PI3Kα was first localized at the 1-cell stage by the ooplasmic movement. Activity of localized PI3Kα at the 4-cell stage was required for the localization of PI3Kα up to the nuclear migration. Our results provide the scaffold for understanding the chain of causality leading to the separation of germ layer fates.
The process of establishing the anterior-posterior axis is an important event in the development of bilateral animals. Otx, which encodes a homeodomain transcription factor, is continuously expressed in the anterior part of the embryo in a wide range of animals. This pattern of expression is thought to be important for the formation of anterior neural structures, but the regulatory mechanism that sustains the expression is not known. Here, using embryos of the ascidian, Halocynthia roretzi, we investigated how the transcription of Otx is maintained in the cells of the anterior neural lineage during embryogenesis. We identified an enhancer region sufficient to mimic the Otx expression pattern from the gastrula to tailbud stages. Several putative transcription factor binding sites that are required for generating the Otx expression pattern were also identified. Distinct sets of sites were required at different developmental stages, suggesting that distinct transcriptional mechanisms regulate Otx transcription in each of the gastrula, neurula and tailbud stages. Along with previous studies on the transcriptional regulatory mechanism of Otx during the pre-gastrula stages, the present results provide the first overview of the mechanism that sustains Otx expression in the anterior neural lineage during ascidian embryogenesis and demonstrate the complexity of a developmental mechanism that maintains Otx transcription.
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