Vertebrate hearts have evolved from undivided tubular hearts of chordate ancestors. One of the most intriguing issues in heart evolution is the abrupt appearance of multichambered hearts in the agnathan vertebrates. To explore the developmental mechanisms behind the drastic morphological changes that led to complex vertebrate hearts, we examined the developmental patterning of the agnathan lamprey Lethenteron japonicum. We isolated lamprey orthologs of genes thought to be essential for heart development in chicken and mouse embryos, including genes responsible for differentiation and proliferation of the myocardium (LjTbx20, LjTbx4/5, and LjIsl1/2A), establishment of left-right heart asymmetry (LjPitxA), and partitioning of the heart tube (LjTbx2/3A), and studied their expression patterns during lamprey cardiogenesis. We confirmed the presence of the cardiac progenitors expressing LjIsl1/2A in the pharyngeal and splanchnic mesoderm and the heart tube of the lamprey. The presence of LjIsl1/2A-positive cardiac progenitor cells in cardiogenesis may have permitted an increase of myocardial size in vertebrates. We also observed LjPitxA expression in the left side of lamprey cardiac mesoderm, suggesting that asymmetric expression of Pitx in the heart has been acquired in the vertebrate lineage. Additionally, we observed LjTbx2/3A expression in the nonchambered myocardium, supporting the view that acquisition of Tbx2/3 expression may have allowed primitive tubular hearts to partition, giving rise to multichambered hearts.
We have isolated four homologs of Engrailed genes from the Japanese lamprey, Lethenteron japonicum, an agnathan that occupies a critical phylogenic position between cephalochordates and gnathostomes. We named these four genes LjEngrailedA, LjEngrailedB, LjEngrailedC, and LjEngrailedD. LjEngrailedA, LjEngrailedB, and LjEngrailedD share a major expression domain in the presumptive midbrain-hindbrain boundary region of the central nervous system, although their levels and timing of expression differed. On the other hand, LjEngrailedC transcripts were in the pharyngeal ectoderm and the ventral ectoderm of the body wall. In addition, LjEngrailedA was expressed in the ventral side of the epibranchial muscle precursors. LjEngrailedD transcripts were seen in the mesodermal cells of the mandibular arch and later in a group of cells responsible for the formation of the upper lip, lower lip, and velum. Our results provide clues to the evolution of these structures as well as a possible scenario for duplication events of Engrailed genes. Developmental Dynamics 237:1581-1589, 2008.
We have identified two Tbx1/10-related genes, LjTbx1/10A and LjTbx1/10B, from the Japanese river lamprey Lethenteron japonicum. We used in situ hybridization to characterize their expression pattern during embryonic development. LjTbx1/10A and LjTbx1/10B shared common expression in the pharyngeal arches and otic vesicle, although their levels and timing of expression differed markedly. LjTbx1/10A was highly expressed in the mesodermal core of pharyngeal arches and the adjacent endoderm throughout pharyngeal arch development, whereas LjTbx1/10B expression was only transiently upregulated in forming pharyngeal pouches. LjTbx1/10A transcripts first appeared at stage 25 in otic vesicles, whereas LjTbx1/10B transcripts could already be detected in the developing otic placode at stage 20. These results suggest that lamprey LjTbx1/10A and LjTbx1/10B may play distinct roles in the patterning and development of the pharyngeal apparatus. It appears that lamprey Tbx1/10 genes have undergone subfunctionalization independent from gnathostomes, with regard to both regulation and function.
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