Lytechinus
variegatus Genes in Development: Endoderm-specific
genes
LvN1.2
Function
LvN1.2 is an endoderm-specific gene (Wessel et al., 1989).
Protein
LvN1.2 is a 25-kDa protein. The sequence of this protein does not correspond
to any known amino acid sequences (Wessel et al., 1989).
SWISS_PROT: P15262
Subcellular location
Immunofluorescence analysis showed that the LvN1.2 protein is present in distinct cytoplasmic
particles concentrated to the apical aspect of the hindgut and midgut cells (Wessel et al., 1989).
Expression Pattern
Nothern blot analysis revealed that the LvN1.2 transcript is first detectable at the mesenchyme
blastula stage and accumulates from gastrulation to the pluteus larval stage approximately
15-fold. The 1.2-kb transcript is not detected in eggs or during early
embryogenesis up to the mesenchyme blastula stage.
In situ hybridization analysis detected no LvN1.2 transcripts
at the mesenchyme blastula stage, or at any earlier developmental stage.
Early in gastrulation (primary invagination) the hybridization signal is present
throughout the invaginating archenteron, but not in mesenchyme cells delaminating from this region.
At the late gastrula embryo regions of presumptive hindgut-midgut are distinguished
from the presumptive foregut by differential LvN1.2 hybridization, through the boundary
separating these regions is not as distinct as in older embryos.
In situ hybridization of pluteus stage embryos demonstrated
that the endodermal cells of the midgut and hindgut contain
similar levels of hybridization signal, but cells of the foregut
do not contain any signal above background.
A sharp boundary exists between cells of the midgut, which contain
maximum hybridization signal, and cells of the foregut, which contain
only background levels of the signal. This boundary, which is also present
between cells of the hindgut and the adjacent anal ectoderm, is 1-2 cells wide.
When embryos of different developmental stages were probed with antibodies to
LvN1.2 protein by Western blots, the 25-kDa protein was first detected in late gastrulae,
approximately 4 hr after the first detectable signal of LvN1.2 mRNA by Nothern blot
analysis. The intensity of the signal increases through development from prism to the
pluteus stage.
Immunofluorescence analysis showed that at late gastrula the LvN1.2 protein is detectable
at low levels in presumptive midgut and hindgut. At the pluteus stage this protein
is present in the midgut and hindgut (Wessel et al., 1989).
mRNA level
Temporal accumulation
Method: Nothern blot hybridization
Reference: Wessel et al., 1989
Stage
Egg
Cleavage
Blastula
Mesenchyme blastula
Early gastrula
Late gastrula
Prism
Pluteus
Level
-
-
-
+
+
+
+ +
+ +
mRNA spatial localization
Method: Whole mount in situ hybridization
Reference: Wessel et al., 1989
Stage
Mesenchyme blastula
Early gastrula
Late gastrula
Prism
Pluteus
Tissue
-
throughout the invaginating archenteron
regions of presumptive hindgut-midgut
regions of presumptive hindgut-midgut
endodermal cells of the midgut and hindgut
Protein level
Temporal accumulation
Method: Western blot hybridization
Reference: Wessel et al., 1989
Stage
Egg
Blastula
Mesenchyme blastula
Early gastrula
Late gastrula
Prism
Pluteus
Level
-
-
-
-
+
+
+ +
Protein spatial localization
Method: Immunofluorescence analysis
Reference: Wessel et al., 1989