Strongylocentrotus
purpuratus Genes in Development: Vegetal plate marker genes
S9
Function
S9 is a vegetal plate marker gene (Miller et al., 1996).
Protein
Sequence analysis of the S9 clone has revealed the presence of an open reading
frame of 122 amino acids that has no significant homology to sequences
in GenBank or EMBL databases (Miller et al., 1996).
Subcellular location
Whole mount in situ hybridization demonstrated that at late blastula S9 transcripts are localized predominantly
in the cytoplasm at the basal end of the cells in the vegetal plate (Miller et al., 1996).
Expression Pattern
A local accumulation of S9 transripts in the vegetal plate was first detectable
by in situ hybridiation at the late blastula stage, at approximately the time
PMC ingression was beginning. A lower level of staining throughout the epithelial
wall of the embryo was also apparent at this stage, which may represent a transient
pattern of early zygotic expression of this gene.
At the mesenchyme blastula stage, after PMC ingression was complete, S9 mRNA was expressed
at high levels throughout much of the vegetal plate in a symmetrical pattern.
PMCs that had ingressed into blastocoel did not express detectable levels of
S9 mRNA, and in specimens that were favorably oriented, a clear zone in the center
of the vegetal plate was apparent, suggesting that the descendants of the small
micromeres (and possibly other cells) did not express the transcript.
At the early gastrula S9-expressing SMCs are ingressing from the vegetal plate into
the blastocoel.
At the early-mid gastrula S9-expressing SMCs continue to ingress into the
blastocoel and several migrate above the equator of the embryo.
At late gastrula S9 transcripts are apparent in the ectodermal layer. In addition, SMCs
at the tip of archenteron express detectable levels of the transcript.
At the prism and pluteus stages S9 mRNA is expressed at high levels by the subset of SMCs that
are closely associated with the dorsal (aboral) ectoderm.
Cell counts indicated that at the early pluteus stage, there are approximately
33 S9-expressing cells per embryo (Miller et al., 1996).
Spatial localization
Method: Whole mount in situ hybridization
Reference: Miller et al., 1996