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Downregulation of extraembryonic tension controls body axis formation in avian embryos.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Kunz, Daniele 
Wang, Anfu 
Chan, Chon U 
Pritchard, Robyn H 

Abstract

Embryonic tissues undergoing shape change draw mechanical input from extraembryonic substrates. In avian eggs, the early blastoderm disk is under the tension of the vitelline membrane (VM). Here we report that the chicken VM characteristically downregulates tension and stiffness to facilitate stage-specific embryo morphogenesis. Experimental relaxation of the VM early in development impairs blastoderm expansion, while maintaining VM tension in later stages resists the convergence of the posterior body causing stalled elongation, failure of neural tube closure, and axis rupture. Biochemical and structural analysis shows that VM weakening is associated with the reduction of outer-layer glycoprotein fibers, which is caused by an increasing albumen pH due to CO2 release from the egg. Our results identify a previously unrecognized potential cause of body axis defects through mis-regulation of extraembryonic tissue tension.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Down-Regulation, Chickens, Blastoderm, Embryonic Development

Journal Title

Nat Commun

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-1723
2041-1723

Volume Title

Publisher

Nature Portfolio
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (215439/Z/19/Z)
Horizon Europe UKRI Underwrite ERC (EP/X023761/1)