Genetic evidence for
involvement of maternally derived Wnt canonical signaling in dorsal determination
in zebrafish
Nojima H, Shimizu T, Kim C H, Yabe T, Bae Y K, Muraoka O, Hirata T, Chitnis
A, Hirano T and Hibi M
Mech Dev 121(4):371-86 (2004)
SUMMARY
In zebrafish, the program for dorsal specification begins soon after fertilization.
Dorsal determinants are localized initially to the vegetal pole, then
transported to the blastoderm, where they are thought to activate the
canonical Wnt pathway, which induces the expression of dorsal-specific
genes. We identified a novel maternal-effect recessive mutation, tokkaebi
(tkk), that affects formation of the dorsal axis. Severely ventralized
phenotypes, including a lack of dorso-anterior structures, were seen in
5-100% of the embryos obtained from tkk homozygous transmitting females.
tkk embryos displayed defects in the nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin
on the dorsal side, and reduced or absent expression of dorsal-specific
genes. Mesoderm and endoderm formation outside the dorsal axis was not
significantly affected. Injection of RNAs for activated beta-catenin,
dominant-negative forms of Axin1 and GSK3beta, and wild-type Dvl3, into
the tkk embryos suppressed the ventralized phenotypes and/or dorsalized
the embryos, and restored or induced an ectopic and expanded expression
of bozozok/dharma and goosecoid. However, dorsalization by wnt RNAs was
affected in the tkk embryos. Inhibition of cytoplasmic calcium release
elicited an ectopic and expanded expression of chordin in the wild-type,
but did not restore chordin expression efficiently in the tkk embryos.
These data indicate that the tkk gene product functions upstream of or
parallel to the beta-catenin-degradation machinery to control the stability
of beta-catenin. The tkk locus was mapped to chromosome 16. These data
provide genetic evidence that the maternally derived canonical Wnt pathway
upstream of beta-catenin is involved in dorsal axis formation in zebrafish.
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