Abstract

Simple SummaryCell adhesion and active cell shape changes play an important role in morphogenetic movements during embryonic development. Zebrafish is an attractive model for the study of cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying these processes. Epiboly is a conserved gastrulation cell movement, which describes the thinning and spreading of an external sheet of cells to cover other groups of cells in the embryo. It involves differential cellular adhesive properties and dynamic cytoskeletal organization across the embryo, but how these are regulated remains elusive. We found that the adaptor protein Lurap1, which interacts with other proteins required for cell migration, plays a role in cell adhesion during epiboly. In zebrafish mutants with loss of Lurap1 function, there is a reduced cellular cohesion in the epithelial blastoderm cells and a delayed epiboly movement. Our observations suggest that Lurap1 is implicated in the regulation of cellular behavior changes for coordinated morphogenetic movements in vertebrate embryos.Cell adhesion and polarized cellular behaviors play critical roles in a wide variety of morphogenetic events. In the zebrafish embryo, epiboly represents an important process of epithelial morphogenesis that involves differential cell adhesion and dynamic cell shape changes for coordinated movements of different cell populations, but the underlying mechanism remains poorly understood. The adaptor protein Lurap1 functions to link myotonic dystrophy kinase-related Rac/Cdc42-binding kinase with MYO18A for actomyosin retrograde flow in cell migration. We previously reported that it interacts with Dishevelled in convergence and extension movements during gastrulation. Here, we show that it regulates blastoderm cell adhesion and radial cell intercalation during epiboly. In zebrafish mutant embryos with loss of both maternal and zygotic Lurap1 function, deep cell multilayer of the blastoderm exhibit delayed epiboly with respect to the superficial layer. Time-lapse imaging reveals that these deep cells undergo unstable intercalation, which impedes their expansion over the yolk cell. Cell sorting and adhesion assays indicate reduced cellular cohesion of the blastoderm. These defects are correlated with disrupted cytoskeletal organization in the cortex of blastoderm cells. Thus, the present results extend our previous works by demonstrating that Lurap1 is required for cell adhesion and cell behavior changes to coordinate cell movements during epithelial morphogenesis. They provide insights for a further understanding of the regulation of cytoskeletal organization during gastrulation cell movements.

Highlights

  • Morphogenetic movements of gastrulation play a critical role in actively moving various cell populations of the early embryo to their future positions, thereby setting up the three germ layers and elongating the anteroposterior axis

  • We previously showed that lurap1 is a maternal gene; zygotic homozygous lurap1 mutants developed normally like wild-type siblings, whereas MZlurap1 mutant embryos showed impaired convergence and extension movements, suggesting that maternal Lurap1 activity is required for these processes [21]

  • A detailed phenotypic analysis indicated that epiboly was delayed in these embryos

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Summary

Introduction

Morphogenetic movements of gastrulation play a critical role in actively moving various cell populations of the early embryo to their future positions, thereby setting up the three germ layers and elongating the anteroposterior axis. These fundamental developmental processes are evolutionarily conserved and mainly involve epiboly, invagination, involution, convergence and extension, and directed collective migration [1]. During the early stages of this movement, the large yolk cell elevates toward the animal pole by a process called doming This produces a blastoderm of uniform thickness that consists of a flattened enveloping monolayer (EVL) and an underlying deep cell multilayer (DEL) of at least four cells thick [2]. Along with other cell movements, both EVL and DEL cells undergo active cell shape changes and rearrangements to coordinately spread toward the vegetal pole and cover the yolk cell by the end of gastrulation [3,4]

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