Abstract

Echinoderms display a vast array of pigmentation and patterning in larval and adult life stages. This coloration is thought to be important for immune defense and camouflage. However, neither the cellular nor molecular mechanism that regulates this complex coloration in the adult is known. Here we knocked out three different genes thought to be involved in the pigmentation pathway(s) of larvae and grew the embryos to adulthood. The genes tested were polyketide synthase (PKS), Flavin-dependent monooxygenase family 3 (FMO3) and glial cells missing (GCM). We found that disabling of the PKS gene at fertilization resulted in albinism throughout all life stages and throughout all cells and tissues of this animal, including the immune cells of the coelomocytes. We also learned that FMO3 is an essential modifier of the polyketide. FMO3 activity is essential for larval pigmentation, but in juveniles and adults, loss of FMO3 activity resulted in the animal becoming pastel purple. Linking the LC-MS analysis of this modified pigment to a naturally purple animal suggested a conserved echinochrome profile yielding a pastel purple. We interpret this result as FMO3 modifies the parent polyketide to contribute to the normal brown/green color of the animal, and that in its absence, other biochemical modifications are revealed, perhaps by other members of the large FMO family in this animal. The FMO modularity revealed here may be important in the evolutionary changes between species and for different immune challenges. We also learned that glial cells missing (GCM), a key transcription factor of the endomesoderm gene regulatory network of embryos in the sea urchin, is required for pigmentation throughout the life stages of this sea urchin, but surprisingly, is not essential for larval development, metamorphosis, or maintenance of adulthood. Mosaic knockout of either PKS or GCM revealed spatial lineage commitment in the transition from bilaterality of the larva to a pentaradial body plan of the adult. The cellular lineages identified by pigment presence or absence (wild-type or knock-out lineages, respectively) followed a strict oral/aboral profile. No circumferential segments were seen and instead we observed 10-fold symmetry in the segments of pigment expression. This suggests that the adult lineage commitments in the five outgrowths of the hydropore in the larva are early, complete, fixed, and each bilaterally symmetric. Overall, these results suggest that pigmentation of this animal is genetically determined and dependent on a population of pigment stem cells that are set-aside in a sub-region of each outgrowth of the pentaradial adult rudiment prior to metamorphosis. This study reveals the complex chemistry of pigment applicable to many organisms, and further, provides an insight into the key transitions from bilateral to pentaradial body plans unique to echinoderms.

Highlights

  • Echinoderms display a vast array of pigmentation and patterning in larval and adult life stages

  • The visual clue of albinism indicated that glial cells missing (GCM) had been mutated to a non-functional form, and is verified by genomic DNA analysis (Fig. 3), but it was surprising that this gene is non-essential for development of the key structures it appears to regulate in larvae

  • We conclude that other genes of the organism must compensate for the activity lost by GCM knockout, perhaps by a genetic compensation triggered by mutant mRNA degradation[28,29,30]

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Summary

Introduction

Echinoderms display a vast array of pigmentation and patterning in larval and adult life stages. We learned that glial cells missing (GCM), a key transcription factor of the endomesoderm gene regulatory network of embryos in the sea urchin, is required for pigmentation throughout the life stages of this sea urchin, but surprisingly, is not essential for larval development, metamorphosis, or maintenance of adulthood. It is clear though that animals are capable of synthesizing large amounts and varieties of naphthaquinone derivatives originating from a polymerization and cyclization of ketides In sea urchins, this organic compound appears to be modified in a variety of ways; additions of aliphatic groups, hydroxylation, and/ or oxidation[12]. Echinochrome pigments are thought to be involved in immune defense as an anti-microbial factor Such activity by the pigment cells in larvae has been studied intensively, and appears to include pigment degranulation in the presence of microbial invaders, resulting in protection of the animal. Unpublished observations (Perillo, Spurrell, Oulhen et al.,) suggest that the pigment cells are still made in Gcm-null animals, but that these “pigment cells” lack pigment

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