Abstract

ABSTRACT Transgenic embryos expressing Cwnt8C under the control of the human β-actin promoter exhibit duplicated axes or a severely dorsalised phenotype. Although the transgene was introduced into fertilised eggs all duplications occurred within a single amnion and, therefore, arose from the production of more than one primitive streak at the time of gastrulation. Morphological examination and the expression of diagnostic markers in transgenic embryos suggested that ectopic Cwnt8C expression produced only incomplete axis duplication: axes were always fused anteriorly, there was a reduction in tissue rostral to the anterior limit of the notochord, and no duplicated expression domain of the forebrain marker Hesx1 was observed. Anterior truncations were evident in dorsalised transgenic embryos containing a single axis. These results are discussed in the light of the effects of ectopic Xwnt8 in Xenopus embryos, where its early expression leads to complete axis duplication but expression after the midblastula transition causes anterior truncation. It is proposed that while ectopic Cwnt8C in the mouse embryo can duplicate the primitive streak and node this only produces incomplete axis duplication because specification of the anterior aspect of the axis, as opposed to maintenance of anterior character, is established by interaction with anterior primitive endoderm rather than primitive streak derivatives.

Keywords

BiologyPrimitive streakGastrulationEndodermNotochordEctopic expressionNeuroectodermEctodermBlastulaEmbryoEmbryogenesisGene duplicationMesodermCell biologyAnatomyEmbryonic stem cellGeneticsGene

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Year
1997
Type
article
Volume
124
Issue
15
Pages
2997-3005
Citations
145
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Heike Pöpperl, Christel Schmidt, Valerie Wilson et al. (1997). Misexpression of <i>Cwnt8C</i> in the mouse induces an ectopic embryonic axis and causes a truncation of the anterior neuroectoderm. Development , 124 (15) , 2997-3005. https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.124.15.2997

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DOI
10.1242/dev.124.15.2997