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Distinct molecular profile of the chick organizer as a stem zone during axial elongation

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


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Authors

Wood, Timothy R. 
Kucinski, Iwo 
Voiculescu, Octavian  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0714-1482

Abstract

The vertebrate organizer plays a crucial role in building the main (antero-posterior) axis of the embryo: it neuralizes the surrounding ectoderm, and is the site of emigration for cells making axial and paraxial mesendoderm during elongation. The chick organizer becomes a stem zone at the onset of elongation; it stops recruiting cells from the neighbouring ectoderm and generates all its derivatives from the small number of resident cells it contains at the end of gastrulation stages. Nothing is known about the molecular identity of this stem zone. Here, we specifically labelled long-term resident cells of the organizer and compared their RNA-seq profile to that of the neighbouring cell populations. Screening by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and in situ hybridization identified four genes (WIF1, PTGDS, ThPO and UCKL1) that are upregulated only in the organizer region when it becomes a stem zone and remain expressed there during axial elongation. In experiments specifically labelling the resident cells of the mature organizer, we show that only these cells express these genes. These findings molecularly define the organizer as a stem zone and offer a key to understanding how this zone is set up, the molecular control of its cells’ behaviour and the evolution of axial growth zones.

Description

Peer reviewed: True


Publication status: Published


Funder: MRC


Funder: Wellcome Trust; FundRef: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010269

Keywords

axial elongation, organizer, chick, stem zone

Journal Title

Open Biology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2046-2441

Volume Title

14

Publisher

The Royal Society