Systematic screening
for signaling molecules expressed during somitogenesis by the signal sequence
trap method
Tonegawa A, Kasai T and Takahashi Y
Dev Biol 262(1):32-50 (2003)
SUMMARY
We describe a systematic screening to search for molecules that act as
an extracellular signal during somitogenesis in vertebrates. Somitogenesis,
which gives rise to segmented structures of axial bones and muscles, is
a consequence of cooperative morphogenetic movements caused by precisely
regulated cell and tissue interactions. We employed a strategy that combined
subtractive hybridization to enrich paraxial mesoderm/somite-specific
cDNAs and the signal sequence trap method, which selects signal sequence-containing
molecules. Ninety-two independent cDNAs found to possess a putative signal
sequence or a transmembrane domain are presented with a data base accession
number for each. These clones include cDNAs which were previously identified
with a function characterized, cDNAs previously identified with an undetermined
function, and also cDNAs with no similarity to known sequences. Among
them, 16 clones exhibited peculiar patterns of expression in the presomitic
mesoderm/somites revealed by whole-mount and section in situ hybridization
techniques, with some clones also being expressed in the forming neural
tube. This is the first report in which an elaborate strategy combining
three different screening steps was employed to identify signaling molecules
relevant to a particular morphogenetic process.
LINK
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=14512016