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Serotonin has Early, Cilia-Independent Roles in Xenopus Left-Right Patterning
Disease Models and Mechanisms (2012)
  • Laura Vandenberg, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Joan M. Lemire
  • Michael Levin
Abstract
Consistent left-right (LR) patterning of the heart and viscera is a crucial part of normal embryogenesis. Because errors of laterality form a common class of birth defects, it is important to understand the molecular mechanisms and stage at which LR asymmetry is initiated. Frog embryos are a system uniquely suited to analysis of the mechanisms involved in orientation of the LR axis because of the many genetic and pharmacological tools available for use and the fate-map and accessibility of early blastomeres. Two major models exist for the origin of LR asymmetry and both implicate pre-nervous serotonergic signaling. In the first, the charged serotonin molecule is instructive for LR patterning; it is redistributed asymmetrically along the LR axis and signals intracellularly on the right side at cleavage stages. A second model suggests that serotonin is a permissive factor required to specify the dorsal region of the embryo containing chiral cilia that generate asymmetric fluid flow during neurulation, a much later process. We performed theory-neutral experiments designed to distinguish between these models. The results uniformly support a role for serotonin in the cleavage-stage embryo, long before the appearance of cilia, in ventral right blastomeres that do not contribute to the ciliated organ.
Disciplines
Publication Date
August 16, 2012
Publisher Statement

DOI: 10.1242/dmm.010256

The published version is located at http://dmm.biologists.org/content/6/1/261.long


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.
Citation Information
Laura Vandenberg, Joan M. Lemire and Michael Levin. "Serotonin has Early, Cilia-Independent Roles in Xenopus Left-Right Patterning" Disease Models and Mechanisms Vol. 6 Iss. 1 (2012)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/laura_vandenberg/13/