Abstract
In vertebrates, the patterning of anterior-posterior (AP) axis is a fundamental process during embryogenesis. Wnt and FGF signalling pathways play important roles in regulating the patterning of embryo AP axis. Mouse Tbx6 encodes a transcription factor that has been demonstrated to be involved in the specification of the posterior tissue in mouse embryonic body. Here, we prove that morpholino-induced knockdown of XTbx6 impairs posterior development, indicating the requirement of XTbx6 in this process. Meanwhile, gain of XTbx6 function is sufficient to induce ectopic posterior structures in Xenopus embryos. Furthermore, XTbx6 activates the expression of Xwnt8 and FGF8, which are two mediators of posterior development, suggesting a mechanism by which XTbx6 modulates posterior patterning via Wnt and FGF signalling pathway activation.
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Introduction
All vertebrate embryos develop along a well-patterned anterior-posterior (AP) axis. Distinct signalling centers, known as organizers, have been identified for patterning either the anterior part of the body (head) or the posterior part (trunk/tail) 1. In Xenopus, the posterior body develops from tailbud, which contains pluripotent mesenchymal cells 2. It has been proved that tailbud tissues function as a tail organizer and several signalling pathways are engaged in Xenopus posterior development 3, 4, 5, 6.
The Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathway functions in posterior development as an essential and conserved activity module. Several Wnt family members such as wnt3a, wnt8 and wnt5 are expressed in the posterior part of the vertebrate embryo and active Wnt/β-catenin signalling promotes the formation of posterior structures 7, 8, 9. Mice lacking the wnt3 gene do not develop posterior structures, indicating that Wnt/β-catenin signalling is required in this patterning process 7, 10. There are also extensive crosstalks between signalling cascades. During posterior body patterning, Wnt signalling pathway interacts with Notch signalling and retinoic acid (RA), which has an activity gradient along the A-P axis 11, 12, 13.
Another group of potent posteriorizing molecules during vertebrate AP patterning are FGFs. FGFs are able to convert anterior neural tissue to more posterior fates, and inhibition of FGF signalling causes strong posterior defects in Xenopus 14, 15. Experiments in mouse, chick and Xenopus strongly suggest that FGF signalling regulates early AP patterning via the modulation of Hox gene expression 16. The fact that FGFs function as posteriorizing factors was also demonstrated in chicken neural tube formation, in which they mediate the maintenance of neural stem cells at Hensen's node. Therefore, FGFs might prolong the time window during which cells are exposed to other posteriorizing factors, such as RA or Wnts. 17. However, despite the importance of Wnt and FGF proteins in posterior development, little is known about their transcriptional regulation.
Tbx6 encodes a T-box transcription factor expressed in mesoderm tissues fated to form the posterior part of the embryonic body. Tbx6 mutant mice show an enlarged tailbud mainly composed of undifferentiated mesenchymal cells, and three neural tubes form at the expense of the posterior somites 18. These data suggest that Tbx6 plays an essential role in posterior patterning through transcriptional regulation of its targets. In this study, we show in Xenopus, antisense morpholino oligonucleotide-mediated knockdown of XTbx6 leads to disruption of the posterior structures. Gain of XTbx6 induces well-patterned posterior structures in embryos. Xwnt8 and FGF8 were identified as targets of XTbx6, supporting the interpretation that XTbx6 exerts its function in posterior development by modulating Wnt and FGF signalling.
Materials and Methods
Xenopus embryo manipulation and microinjection
Xenopus laevis fertilized eggs were obtained, dejellied and cultured as described previously 19, staged according to Nieuwkoop and Faber 20. In tailbud cutting experiment (Figure 1), the embryos were manipulated in 1× MBS and the tailbuds were cultured in 1× MBS. In Figure 1, XTbx6Mo or XTbx6Mo mixed with XTbx6 mRNA or control Mo was injected into ventral marginal zone at two-cell stage or four-cell stage. XTbx6 plasmid was injected into dorsal animal pole at two-cell stage or four-cell stage. For co-immunoprecipitation, XTbx6 mRNA mixed with Lef-1 plasmid or XTbx6Mo mixed with Lef-1 plasmid was injected into marginal zone. For western blot, XTbx6 mRNA or XTbx6Mo was injected into marginal zone. The final concentration for injection is XTbx6 mRNA 400 ng/ml, Lef-1-Engrailed mRNA 400 ng/ml, XFD mRNA 400 ng/ml, XTbx6 plasmid 70 ng/ml and Lef-1-HA plasmid 70ng/ml. Each embryo was loaded 3-5 nl mRNA or DNA.
Morpholino
The morpholino antisense oligonucleotide designed to act against XTbx6 was GAG CTC AGA GTG GTA CAT GGC TGC TG, and its control was gtG cag cca tgt acc act ctg agc tG. Morpholino was stored on −80 °C and diluted in TE to the final concentration of 0.2 nM/ml for using.
The in vitro transcription/translation of XTbx6Mo specificity test was performed according to Transcription and Translation kit (TNT)-coupled reticulocyte lysate system (Promega, L4610).
Constructs and in vitro transcription of RNA and in situ hybridization
XTbx6 coding sequence was cloned into plasmid pCS2+ with HindIII (5′) and XbaI (3′); for preparing XTbx6 mRNA, the pCS2-XTbx6 was linearized with NotI and transcribed with SP6 RNA polymerase 19. Xbra coding sequence was cloned into plasmid pCS2+ with XbaI (5′) and EcoRI (3′); for preparing Xbra probe, the plasmid was linearized with NotI and transcribed with SP6 RNA polymerase. For preparing Xwnt3a probe, a part of Xwnt3a cDNA sequence was cloned into plasmid pCS2+ with EcoRI (5′) and XhoI (3′), and the primers for Xwnt3a probe were GCA GAA TTC AGA TGG GCT GCT TTG GAT AT (forward) and CAA ATT CTC GAG ACA CCA TG (reverse). The pCS2+Xwnt3a-probe plasmid was linearized with NotI and transcribed with SP6 RNA polymerase. The other templates for probe synthesis were as follows: pCS2-FGF8 was linearized with XhoI and transcribed with T7 RNA polymerase 21, pCS2-XLDeltaI was linearized with EcoRV and transcribed with T7 RNA polymerase 22, pCS107-Xwnt8-HA was linearized with XhoI and transcribed with T7 RNA polymerase (from Wylie-Heasman lab), pGS1-HoxB9 was linearized with EcoRI and transcribed with T7 RNA polymerase 23, pBluescript1-Shh was linearized with BamHI and transcribed with T3 RNA polymerase 24, Lef-1-Engrailed was linearized with KpnI and transcribed with SP6 RNA polymerase and XFD was linearized with EcoRI and transcribed with SP6 RNA polymerase 14.
The templates preparation for mRNA or probes were performed as described previously 19 (Ambion, Roche ). In situ hybridizations were performed as described 25.
Immunohistochemical reaction
Whole-mount immunohistochemical reactions were performed by using Xen1 26 (Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, University of Iowa) or 12/101 27 (Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, University of Iowa) antibody as described previously 28.
Animal cap reverse-transcription PCR
XTbx6 mRNA was injected into animal poles of frog embryos at either two-cell stage or four-cell stage. Animal caps were dissected at stage 8, cultured in 1× MBS and harvested at either stage 11 or stage 11.5. RNA isolation and reverse transcription were performed as described 19 (Invitrogen). The optimal programs were determined by titration. ODC (55 °C, 25 cycles), FGF8 (55 °C, 28 cycles) and Xwnt8 (55 °C, 28 cycles). Primers for ODC were CAG CTA GCT GTG GTG TGG (forward) and CAA CAT GGA AAC TCA CAC C (reverse) 29. Primers for FGF8 were CTG GTG ACC GAC CAA CTA AG (forward) and ACC AGC CTT CGT ACT TGA CA (reverse) 30. Primes for Xwnt8 were TAT CTG GAA GTT GCA GCA TAC A (forward) and GCA GGC ACT CTC GTC CCT CTG T (reverse) 31.
Co-immunoprecipitation and Western blot
HA-tagged Lef-1 constructs, alone or together with XTbx6MO or XTbx6 mRNA, were injected into the DMZ, and the embryos were then cultured in 0.1 × MMR and collected until stage 20. The embryos were lysed in lysis buffer containing 50 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.0), 150mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1% Nonidet P-40 and cocktail protease inhibitors (Bio Basics), stored on ice for 15 min and mixed with 3/5 volume FREON. One-tenth of the supernatant after 13 000 rpm. centrifuge was saved for loading control and the rest was incubated with protein-A agarose (Santa Cruz) and anti-HA monoclonal antibody (dilution 1:1000) (Sigma, Cat. No. H9658) with mild shaking at 4 °C for 2 h. The protein-A agarose beads was washed three times and then boiled in 1× protein loading buffer and subjected to western blot.
Western blot was performed as described 32. Polyclonal antibody P14L was used for visualizing β-catenin (dilution 1:2 000) and anti-HA monoclonal antibody (dilution 1:10 000) was used for HA-tagged Lef-1. Both ERK (Cell Signaling Technology, Cat. No. 9102) and phospho-ERK antibody (Cell Signaling Technology, Cat. No. 9101) (dilution 1:2000) were used according to the manufacturer's instructions. For loading control, 1/5 of the loading volume for detection of ERK and phosphor-ERK was used for monoclonal anti-β-actin antibody (Sigma, dilution 1:10 000).
Results
Knockdown of XTbx6 function disrupts the posterior development
The previous study 33, 34 reported that XTbx6 mRNA is expressed in the mesoderm of embryos from gastrulation onward, especially in cells destined to form posterior mesoderm structures. We performed a more detailed analysis of XTbx6 expression in tailbud stage embryos, and found that XTbx6 mRNA is present in the chordoneural hinge and the posterior wall (Figure 1A and 1B), which are both important components of the tail organizer 3. This distinct expression pattern strongly suggests that XTbx6 is implicated in posterior pattern formation during Xenopus embryogenesis.
In order to investigate the potential role of XTbx6 in posterior patterning, we performed the knockdown experiment by targeting XTbx6 translation with a morpholino oligonucleotide (XTbx6Mo), which is complementary to the initial codons of XTbx6 mRNA (Figure 1C). The specificity of XTbx6Mo was examined in the in vitro transcription and translation system. As shown in Figure 1C, the 67 kDa XTbx6-Myc protein was synthesized when control morpholino (a mutant version of XTbx6 morpholino) was added into the in vitro transcription and translation system (Figure 1C, lane 1), but the 67 kDa band was abolished when XTbx6Mo was added (Figure 1C, lane 2). However, XTbx6Mo could not abolish the translation of XTbx6-s-Myc, which has a sequence similar to XTbx6-Myc but just lacks the XTbx6Mo binding sites (Figure 1C, lane 3). XTbx6Mo was injected at four-cell stage into the ventral marginal zone, which will later form the posterior mesoderm, and embryos were cultured to NF stage 35. XTbx6Mo-injected embryos displayed severe posterior defects (47/50), such as shortened tailbud, distorted posterior body axis and disorganized somites (Figure 1E). In contrast, embryos injected with control Mo did not display any defects (Figure 1G). Co-injection of XTbx6Mo with XTbx6 mRNA completely rescued the defects (Figure 1F).
Xenopus tailbuds isolated and cultured in vitro will continue to grow, forming a tail that is morphologically identical to the endogenous one with myotomes, notochord, neural tube and fin 3. To further test whether XTbx6 is required for patterning posterior body, we dissected the tailbud region including XTbx6-positive tissues at stage 23, and cultured them until stage 35. While control tailbuds elongated and formed tails (Figure 1H and 1I), XTbx6Mo-injected explants did not elongate and displayed no morphological changes, except the development of fin (Figure 1J and 1K). Taken together, these results indicate that XTbx6 is required for posterior body patterning of Xenopus embryo.
Ectopic expression of XTbx6 induces axis structures with the posterior characteristics
To further investigate the biological significance of XTbx6 in posterior patterning, gain-of-function experiments were performed in Xenopus embryos. When XTbx6 was ectopically expressed after midblastula transition (MBT) by injection of XTbx6 expression plasmid into the dorsal animal blastomeres (Figure 2A), ectopic structures were induced (34/73) (Figure 2B). These ectopic structures had well-developed fins (Figure 2B), correctly distributed melanocytes (Figure 2C) and a proctodeum (Figure 2D and 2E), which are all morphological characteristics of posterior body.
Immunohistochemical staining and in situ hybridization were performed to define the tissues within the XTbx6-induced structures. Well-developed neural tubes, marked with the neural specific antibody Xen1, were observed (Figure 3A and 3B). Notochord identified by the expression of Shh positioned underneath the neural tube, and the Shh signal was also visible in the floor plate of ectopic neural tube (Figure 3C). Using the muscle-specific antibody 12/101, we found very strong staining in XTbx6-induced structures. In some cases, 12/101-positive cells showed typical metameric arrangement (Figure 3D and 3E), indicating the differentiation of somites. Our results clearly show that the structures induced after XTbx6 ectopic expression contain muscle, notochord and neural tissue. The spatial arrangement of these tissues in the ectopic structures is identical to the endogenous pattern. Gain of XTbx6 function is sufficient to induce well-patterned posterior structures.
Since Wnt and FGF signalling pathways are essential for posterior body patterning, we asked whether these pathways are also involved in the formation of the ectopic structure. The XTbx6-induced posterior structures expressed the Wnt ligands Xwnt8 (Figure 3F), Xwnt3a (Figure 3G) as well as the Wnt pathway downstream target XDelta1 (Figure 3H) in a spatial pattern similar to that in endogenous development. The same was true for FGF8 (Figure 3I) and the FGF target genes Xbra (Figure 3J) and HoxB9 (Figure 3K). These data argue that the XTbx6-induced structures are formed by the same or similar mechanisms as those in endogenous embryos.
XTbx6 mediates posterior patterning via Wnt and FGF signalling activation
In the XTbx6-induced posterior body structure, Xwnt8, Xwnt3a, XDeltaI, FGF8 and Xbra were expressed (Figure 3). It suggested the possibility that XTbx6 might function in transcriptional regulation of some molecules controlling posterior patterning. Therefore, we raise a hypothesis that XTbx6 might mediate posterior patterning through activating the Wnt and FGF signalling pathways.
Animal cap assay was used to elucidate whether XTbx6 induces Xwnt8, Xwnt3a and FGF8 expression. We found XTbx6 mRNA induces the expression of Xwnt8 and FGF8 (Figure 4F), but Xwnt3a was not induced in the animal cap assay (data not shown). Endogenous Xwnt8 and FGF8 expression were downregulated when XTbx6Mo was injected into ventral marginal zone at four-cell stage (Figure 4A and 4D), with Xwnt3a not affected (Figure 4C). Importantly, XDeltaI and Xbra, two important downstream effectors of Wnt and FGF signalling pathways, respectively 35, 36, 37, also showed marked downregulation (Figure 4B and 4E).
To confirm whether the XTbx6-induced expression of Wnt and FGF ligands indeed leads to activation of these two signalling pathways in vivo, we checked the amount of the nuclear localized β-catenin and phosphorylation of ERK, which indicate the activation of these two respective pathways. Result from co-immunoprecipitation between injected HA-tagged Lef-1 and endogenous β-catenin showed that the amount of nuclear localized β-catenin in XTbx6 mRNA-loaded embryos was higher than that in Lef-1 injected alone, and the opposite phenomena appeared in XTbx6Mo-loaded embryos (compared with control embryos) (Figure 4G). ERK phosphorylation is an indication of FGF signalling pathway activation. Western blot with the antibody specifically recognizing phosphorylated ERK protein showed that the amount of phosphorylated ERK protein was upregulated in the embryos loaded with XTbx6 mRNA, and was downregulated in the embryos loaded with XTbx6Mo, compared with control embryos (Figure 4H).
To further prove that FGF and Wnt signalling mediate XTbx6 function, Wnt signalling antagonist Lef-1-Engrailed mRNA or FGF signalling antagonist XFD mRNA was co-injected with XTbx6 (Figure 4J and 4L) into dorsal animal pore at four-cell stage. Lef-1-Engrailed is a fusion protein consisting of the full-length Lef-1 and the transcriptional repressor domain of the Drosophila Engrailed protein added to C-terminal of Lef-1 protein. Lef-1 binds to the same DNA sequence as Tcf-3 38, and overexpressed Lef-1-Engrailed efficiently represses Wnt target genes in Xenopus (our unpublished results and reference 39). In both cases (46/54 with XTbx6 and Lef-1-Engrailed, 43/50 with XTbx6 and XFD), the effect of XTbx6 induction was largely blocked. Taken together, our results demonstrate that XTbx6 plays a crucial role in posterior patterning through modulating endogenous FGF and Wnt signalling pathways.
Discussion
The patterning of the vertebrate posterior body has been investigated in mouse, avian, fish and amphibian embryos. Accumulating evidence indicated the existence of a tail organizer, which, like the head organizer, plays key roles in patterning the posterior body structures. Molecular mechanism involved in organizer activity has been studied and signalling pathways like FGF and Nodal are demonstrated to be the tail organizer components. However, there is still much remaining unknown about this complicated process, especially about the interaction of signalling pathways.
Tbx6 is believed to be involved in vertebrate posterior body development. In Tbx6 null mouse, the differentiation of paraxial mesoderm was profoundly affected, with the posterior paraxial tissue differentiating into neural fate instead of forming somites, and the formation of posterior body was also largely impaired 18. This dramatic alteration indicates that mouse Tbx6 is needed for cells adopting the paraxial mesoderm cell fate, and needed to pattern the posterior body structure as well. However, the multiple morphological defects in Tbx6 knockout mouse make it difficult to identify how XTbx6 functions in different developmental events. Our data presented here provide solid in vivo evidence that XTbx6 is sufficient and required for the formation of posterior structures in Xenopus embryos. The XTbx6-induced ectopic posterior structure displays a perfect morphological and histological pattern. We have also transplanted XTbx6-loaded animal tissue into stage 13 neural plate, to test the induction capacity in a similar assay as that performed by Beck and Slack 4, and found that the animal tissue was indeed able to induce posterior structure similar to that induced by injection of XTbx6 into animal pole (data not shown). Furthermore, we found that the initiation of posterior structure by introducing XTbx6 into embryos could only be achieved by injecting DNA into the dorsal animal pole, whose descendants are destined to neural ectoderm, but not the other part of the embryos. Injecting mRNA was less effective in terms of producing the ectopic posterior structure. Since the previous reports have indicated that interaction between neural ectoderm and mesoderm is important for development of the tail 4, 5, the evidence we presented here provides valuable cues for further investigation about how Tbx6 exerts its function in posterior patterning.
The finding that XTbx6 is sufficient and required for the formation of posterior structures in Xenopus embryos (Figures 1 and 2) also allows us to incorporate XTbx6 into the signalling network of regulators for the posterior body formation. There is a substantial set of data demonstrating that the Wnt signalling pathway is an essential component of the posterior organizing center in vertebrate embryos 40, 41, and members of the FGF family are thought to play important roles in trunk and tail formation 14. Brachyury, another T-box transcription factor, which can engage in mutual activation with FGF and maintains a positive-feedback loop 36, is also essential for the development of the posterior part of the embryo 42. In this current work, we identified Wnt8 and FGF8 as downstream targets of XTbx6, and manipulation of XTbx6 level in embryos could strongly affect the endogenous activities of Wnt or FGF signalling pathways (Figure 3). As XTbx6 is regulated by BMP, FGF and Nodal/activin signalling pathways 19, it is thus reasonable to position XTbx6 in the molecular network, which controls the posterior development in Xenopus (Figure 5). For further investigation, experiments should be carried out to examine how the positive-feedback loop between FGF and XTbx6 is maintained and determine the direct target genes activated by XTbx6 (XWnt8, FGF8 and Xbra all are candidates). These efforts will help us to understand how the molecular network is synchronized during embryo posterior patterning.
In Tbx6 null mouse, three neural tubes form at the expense of the posterior somites 18 and the Tbx6 null ES cells fail to populate posterior somites in chimeric embryos 43. It is worthy to perform lineage-tracing experiments to identify the cell fate of XTbx6-loaded cells in the induced posterior structure. Results from this experiment could drop a hint to us that XTbx6 might direct the mesoderm differentiation in a cell-autonomous manner, and promote ectoderm patterning in a non-cell-autonomous way.
During the preparation of this manuscript, Li et al.44 reported that FGF8, Xwnt8 and XMyf5 are target genes of XTbx6, and that these target genes act downstream and mediate the function of XTbx6 in anteroposterior specification. Our results are consistent with this study, which together with our in vivo loss-of-function and gain-of-function experiments provided convincing evidence to the conclusion that XTbx6 mediates posterior patterning via regulation of Wnt and FGF signalling.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Dr Peter S Klein (Department of Medicine and Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Pennsylvania), Dr Christof Niehrs (Division of Molecular Embryology German Cancer Research Center) for constructs, and Dr Schneider (Max-Planck-Institut fur Entwicklungsbiologie) for b-catenin antibody. We also thank Dr Jinhu Wang and Dr Zhao He for discussion of the project and critical reading of the manuscript. This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (90408005, 30270650) and the National Key Project for Basic Science Research of China (2001CB509901).
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Lou, X., Fang, P., Li, S. et al. Xenopus Tbx6 mediates posterior patterning via activation of Wnt and FGF signalling. Cell Res 16, 771–779 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.cr.7310093
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.cr.7310093