The homeobox gene Lox3 is expressed in a segmentally iterated pattern within the endoderm of the leech Helobdella. We use that expression here to study endoderm differentiation following experimental ablations of mesoderm. Lox3 RNA was first detected by in situ hybridization at the stage when a definitive cellular endoderm is formed from its syncytial precursor and was never observed in derivatives of other germ layers. Expression is initially distributed throughout the endoderm, but rapidly disappears from specific regions of the nascent gut wall so as to produce a pattern of segmental stripes. The stripe pattern differs markedly between midgut organs, with thin stripes of Lox3 expression in the intercaecal constrictions of the crop and wide stripes of Lox3 expression marking the caecal bulges of the intestine. Lox3 expression in the rectum is not obviously segmental. Ablation of segmental mesoderm in the early Helobdella embryo prevents the formation of definitive endoderm and the expression of Lox3 RNA and leads to abnormalities in the morphogenesis of the gut tube. These endodermal deficits are precisely coextensive with the zone of mesodermal deficiency, suggesting that the mesoderm normally acts to promote the formation of the endodermal cell layer via local cell interactions. The segmental pattern of Lox3 expression is largely unaffected in portions of the endoderm surrounding such deficits, suggesting that endodermal segmentation is not established by lateral interactions within that tissue layer. Rather, we propose that the segmental organization of the endoderm is imprinted by vertical interactions with the segmental mesoderm.
CITATION STYLE
Wedeen, C. J., & Shankland, M. (1997). Mesoderm is required for the formation of a segmented endodermal cell layer in the leech Helobdella. Developmental Biology, 191(2), 202–214. https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.1997.8735
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.