Abstract

Developmental processes associated with skeletogenesis differ in the direct-developing sea urchin Heliocidaris erythrogrammafrom that in Heliocidaris tuberculataand other indirect-developing species. In H. erythrogramma,the differences include ingression of a much higher number of mesenchyme cells, failure of the cells to form the typical ring pattern of cells prior to the onset of skeletogenesis, a significantly reduced larval skeleton, and a delay in timing of expression of the skeletogenic cell-restricted gene msp130.We report that the heterochronic change in msp130expression is regulated at the level of transcription. By transient expression of reporter constructs containing msp130promoter regions from direct- and indirect-developing species, we found that this evolutionary change in regulation is consistent with changes in the timing of action of trans-acting factors in skeletogenic mesenchyme cells. We further used these experiments to show that the H. erythrogrammapromoter contains elements required for correct spatial expression in the primary mesenchyme cells of an indirect-developing host. We finally show that alternate processing of H. erythrogramma msp130is thus far specific to this species and not an aspect of adult skeletogenesis.

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