2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session V7: Oscillations and Segmentation: Dynamical Genetic Regulation in Time and Space
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: RO5
Sponsoring
Units:
DBP GSNP
Chair: Mogens Jensen, Niels Bohr Institute
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.V7.1
Abstract: V7.00001 : Building the Vertebrate Spine
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Olivier Pourqui\'e
(Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Stowers Institute for Medical Research)
The vertebrate body can be subdivided along the antero-posterior
(AP) axis into repeated structures called segments. This periodic
pattern is established during embryogenesis by the somitogenesis
process. Somites are generated in a rhythmic fashion from the
paraxial mesoderm and subsequently differentiate to give rise to
the vertebrae and skeletal muscles of the body. Somite formation
involves an oscillator-the segmentation clock-whose periodic
signal is converted into the periodic array of somite boundaries.
This clock drives the dynamic expression of cyclic genes in the
presomitic mesoderm and requires Notch and Wnt signaling.
Microarray studies of the mouse presomitic mesoderm transcriptome
reveal that the segmentation clock drives the periodic expression
of a large network of cyclic genes involved in cell signaling.
Mutually exclusive activation of the Notch/FGF and Wnt pathways
during each cycle suggests that coordinated regulation of these
three pathways underlies the clock oscillator. In humans,
mutations in the genes associated to the function of this
oscillator such as \textit{Dll3} or \textit{Lunatic Fringe}
result in abnormal segmentation of the vertebral column such as
those seen in congenital scoliosis. Whereas the segmentation
clock is thought to set the pace of vertebrate segmentation, the
translation of this pulsation into the reiterated arrangement of
segment boundaries along the AP axis involves dynamic gradients
of FGF and Wnt signaling. The FGF signaling gradient is
established based on an unusual mechanism involving mRNA decay
which provides an efficient means to couple the spatio-temporal
activation of segmentation to the posterior elongation of the
embryo. Another striking aspect of somite production is the
strict bilateral symmetry of the process. Retinoic acid was shown
to control aspects of this coordination by buffering
destabilizing effects from the embryonic left-right machinery.
Defects in this embryonic program controlling vertebral symmetry
might lead to scoliosis in humans. Finally, the subsequent
regional differentiation of the precursors of the vertebrae is
controlled by \textit{Hox} genes, whose collinear expression
controls both gastrulation of somite precursors and their
subsequent patterning into region-specific types of structures.
Therefore somite development provides an outstanding paradigm to
study patterning and differentiation in vertebrate embryos.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.V7.1