Abstract

Maternal information stored in particular regions of the egg cytoplasm has an important function in the determination of developmental fate during early animal development. Ascidians show mosaic development; such autonomous development has been taken as evidence that prelocalized ooplasmic factors specify tissue precursor cells during embryogenesis. Interest has been concentrated on the mechanisms underlying the formation of muscle cells in the tail, as yellow-coloured myoplasm in eggs is preferentially segregated into muscle-lineage blastomeres. Here we show that maternal messenger RNA of the macho-1 gene is a determinant of muscle fate in the ascidian Halocynthia roretzi. The macho-1 mRNA encodes a zinc-finger protein, and the mRNA is localized to the myoplasm of eggs. Depletion of the mRNA specifically resulted in the loss of primary muscle cells in the tail, as shown by the expression of muscle-specific molecular markers. The myoplasm of macho-1-deficient eggs lost its ability to promote muscle formation. Injection of synthesized macho-1 mRNA caused ectopic muscle formation in non-muscle-lineage cells. Our results indicate that macho-1 maybe both required and sufficient for specification of muscle fate, and that the mRNA is a genuine, localized muscle determinant.

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