Citation:
bioRxiv. 2020;[preprint] doi:10.1101/2020.08.09.242933
Abstract:
Deoxygenation, the reduction of oxygen level in the oceans induced by global warming and anthropogenic disturbances, is a major threat to marine life. Acute diurnal changes in oxygen levels could be especially harmful to vertebrate and sea urchin embryos that utilize endogenous hypoxia gradients to drive morphogenetic events during normal development. Here we show that the tolerance to hypoxic conditions changes between different developmental stages of the sea urchin embryo, due to the structure of the gene regulatory networks (GRNs). We demonstrate that during normal development, bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) pathway restricts the activity of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) pathway to two lateral domains and by that controls proper skeletal patterning. Hypoxia applied during early development strongly perturbs the activity of Nodal and BMP pathways that affect VEGF pathway, dorsal-ventral (DV) and skeletogenic patterning. These pathways are largely unaffected by hypoxia applied after DV axis formation. We propose that the structure of the DV GRN, that includes feedback and feedforward loops, increases its resilience to changes of the initial oxygen gradients and helps the embryos tolerate transient hypoxia.
Epub:
Not Epub
Link to Publication:
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.08.09.242933v2
Organism or Cell Type:
Paracentrotus lividus (sea urchin)
Delivery Method:
microinjection