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First published online February 18, 2004
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.00986


Development 131, 983-995 (2004)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2004


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Segmental development of reticulospinal and branchiomotor neurons in lamprey: insights into the evolution of the vertebrate hindbrain

Yasunori Murakami1,*, Massimo Pasqualetti2,3, Yoko Takio1, Shigeki Hirano4, Filippo M. Rijli2 and Shigeru Kuratani1

1 Evolutionary Morphology Research Team, Center for Developmental Biology (CDB), RIKEN, Kobe, Japan
2 Institut de Génétique et de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, UMR 7104, CNRS/INSERM/ULP, BP 10142-67404 Illkirch Cedex, CU de Strasbourg, France
3 Laboratori di Biologia Cellulare e dello Sviluppo, Università di Pisa, Via G. Carducci 13, Pisa, Italy
4 Department of Medical Technology, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Niigata University, Niigata 951-8518, Japan



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Fig. 1. Development of reticulospinal neurons in the lamprey. (A-D) Dextran labeling of the reticular neurons. (A) Stage 23.5 embryo. Isthmic (I) and medial inferior reticulospinal (mir) neurons are labeled, whereas bulbar (B) and Mauthner (Mth) neurons are not yet detected. (B) Stage 24.5 embryo. Mth neuron and the B neuron cluster are observed at the level of the otic vesicle (OV). (C) The same embryo as in B, focused at a more dorsal hindbrain level. Crossing axons of Mth neurons are visible (arrow). (D) Stage 28 larva. I and B neurons have increased in number, and I1 neuron has appeared. Most of the reticulospinal components of the lamprey are formed at this stage. Anterior is towards the top.

 


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Fig. 2. Identification of rhombomeres in the lamprey. (A) LjKrox20 expression (blue) in relation to the localization of acetylated tubulin (brown) in a stage 25 embryo (anterior is towards the left). (B) Cranial nerve roots (arrowheads) and rhombomere boundaries (arrows) are visualized with the anti-acetylated tubulin antibody. Note that LjKrox20 expression domain corresponds well to the morphological rhombomere boundaries (compare arrows in A and B). (C,D) LjPax6 expression (blue) and reticulospinal neuron (brown) localization. (C) Dorsal view of a stage 26 embryo. Reticular neurons including I1, B and mir have developed lateral to the LjPax6 expression domain at the hindbrain midline. (D) Lateral view of the same embryo. Mth is located in r4, where LjPax6 is expressed at low levels. B, bulbar neurons; I, isthmic reticular neurons; MHB, mid-hindbrain boundary; mir, medial inferior reticulospinal neurons; Mth, Mauthner neuron; Mth', auxiliary Mauthner neuron; V1, profundus ganglion; V2/3, trigeminal ganglion; VII, facial ganglion

 


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Fig. 4. Expression of LjEphC and spatial patterning of reticulospinal neurons. (A,B) Expression of LjEphC in a stage 25 lamprey embryo. (A) Lateral view. LjEphC is expressed in the hindbrain with two clear domains corresponding to r3 and r5. (B) Dorsal view of the same embryo. Note that the otic vesicle is adjacent to an LjEphC-negative hindbrain region, corresponding to r4 (arrows). (C-F) Positions of bulbar (B) and Mth neurons in relation to the expression of LjEphC. Reticular neurons are visualized by whole-mount in situ hybridization with a neurofilament protein antisense riboprobe. (C) Lateral view of a stage 25 embryo. (D) Dorsal view of the same embryo as in C. (E,F) Higher magnification of the embryo in C. (E) Lateral view. (F) Dorsal view. Note that the B and Mth neurons are located in the LjEphC-negative domain corresponding to r4.

 


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Fig. 3. Regulatory gene expression domains and positions of reticulospinal neurons. (A,B) Neuronal labeling in combination with whole-mount in situ hybridization using a LjKrox20 riboprobe. (A) Lateral view of a stage 25 embryo. With respect to the LjKrox20 expression domains, the I4 neuron is located in r3, Mth neuron in r4, and Mth' neuron in r5. (B) Lateral view of a stage 26 embryo. Newly developed I3 neuron is located in putative r2. Note that other labeled neurons are located at the same axial levels as in the stage 25 embryo shown in A. (C,D) Reticulospinal neurons and LjHox3 expression. (C) Lateral view of a stage 25 embryo. (D) Ventral view of a stage 26 embryo. The position of the Mth neuron corresponds to the anterior LjHox3 expression boundary (arrowheads).

 


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Fig. 5. Developmental patterns of lamprey branchial motoneurons and the reticulospinal tract. (A-C) Confocal microphotographs of a stage 26 lamprey larva. Lateral (A,C) and dorsal (B) views. In the hindbrain, the rhodamine-labeled reticulospinal tract (purple) runs below the fluorescein-labeled trigeminal (Vm) and facial (VII) motor nuclei (green). Note that the Mauthner (Mth) neuron is located between Vm and VII. (D) Stage 30 embryo. The Mth neuron is at the posterior margin of Vm (purple) as in stage 26. (E) A stage 28 larva in which facial (VII), glossopharyngeal (IX) and vagus (X) nerves have been labeled. Branchial motor nuclei (green) are arranged along the anteroposterior axis, as seen in the adult. Note that the Mth neuron (purple) appears in the rostral hindbrain and adjacent to the VIIth nucleus as in the stage 26 larva.

 


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Fig. 6. Comparison of branchial motor neurons and regulatory gene expression domains. Branchial motor neurons (brown) are labeled in combination with LjKrox20 (A-C) or LjHox3 (D) expression domains (blue). (A) Lateral view of a stage 26 larva. (B) Dorsal view of the same larva. Note that the trigeminal (Vm) nucleus expands posteriorly into the LjKrox20-negative region, i.e. the presumptive r4 (white arrows). The facial (VIIm) nucleus also partially maps in the presumptive r4 domain (black arrow). (C) The glossopharyngeal motor (IXm) nucleus is just posterior to the r5 domain of LjKrox20. (D) The rostral boundary of LjHox3 expression maps between the Vm and VIIm nuclei. The inset clearly shows that the trigeminal motor nucleus is located just rostral to the LjHox3 expression domain.

 


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Fig. 8. Evolution of reticular and branchiomotor neurons in the hindbrain of the vertebrate embryo. The hypothetical rhombomeric organization of the lamprey brain is based on LjPax6, LjEphC, LjKrox20 and LjHox3 expression data. LjHox3 is strongly expressed up to the mid r4 level in this scheme. (Top) Hypothetical schema for the evolution of reticular neurons. Based on this architecture, lamprey I3 is positioned in r2, and I4 in r3. Mth and B neurons are localized in r4, and Mth' appears in r5. Thus, the developmental pattern of the lamprey reticular neurons is segmental. (Bottom) Branchiomotor patterning through phylogeny. Branchiomotor neurons, including trigeminal (V), facial (VII), glossopharyngeal (IX) and vagus (X) motor nuclei, are shown in different colors. The lamprey trigeminal motor nucleus extends posteriorly into r4, which is not seen in gnathostomes. Note that the boundary between the trigeminal and facial nuclei maps in the middle of r4 correspond to the strong LjHox3 expression boundary, and not to the r4/r5 boundary as in gnathostomes.

 


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Fig. 7. Effect of exogenous RA on the development of the reticulospinal and branchiomotor neurons. (A-C) Confocal micrographs of reticulospinal neurons in stage 26 lamprey larvae that had been treated with 0 µM (A), 0.01 µM (B), 0.1 µM (C) all-trans RA. (D-F) Positions of the Mth neuron of stage 25 embryos in relation to the expression of LjKrox20 after treatment with RA. The Mth neuron is visualized by whole-mount in situ hybridization with a neurofilament protein antisense riboprobe. Note that the Mth neuron is always located at the middle of r4. (G,H) Positions of Mth neurons in stage 25 embryos in relation to the expression of LjHox3 in the control (G) and embryos treated with 0.1 µM RA (H). LjHox3 domain is shifted anteriorly in the RA-treated larvae (compare arrows in G and H). (I,J) Expression of Lj Fgf8/17 in the control (I) and 0.1 µM RA-treated (J) stage 26 larvae. (K-N) Confocal micrographs of stage 26 larvae. (K,M) Control larvae in which trigeminal (Vm), facial (VIIm), glossopharyngeal (IXm) and vagus (Xm) neurons are clustered along the anteroposterior axis (K), and the trigeminal motor nuclei positioned posterior to the mid-hindbrain boundary (MHB: M). In 0.1 µM RA-treated larvae (L,N), boundaries between the branchiomotor nuclei (BM) have become unclear (L), and the presumptive trigeminal nucleus extends rostrally beyond the MHB (N).

 


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Fig. 9. Hypothetical scenario for the evolution of the vertebrate hindbrain. In the hypothetical common ancestor of the chordates, the neural tube is assumed to be regionalized along the anteroposterior axis by the nested expression patterns of the Hox genes. In the common ancestor of vertebrates, segmental patterns of reticular neuron development are established in the hindbrain region. The appearance of hindbrain segmentation results in repeated sets of serially homologous reticular neurons. In support of this hypothesis, reticular-like neurons are already present in amphioxus (Fritzsch, 1996Go), although this organism does not possess hindbrain segmentation. The anteroposterior specification of branchiomotor neurons is already under the control of a Hox code in the common ancestor. In vertebrates, the registering of hindbrain segmentation and Hox code regulation appears in the gnathostome lineage, as suggested by the analysis of the lamprey branchiomotor neuron spatial pattern and Hox regulation. In amniotes, large interneurons have been lost, together with the overt serial homology of these neurons. This scenario of vertebrate hindbrain evolution postulates independent mechanisms for neuronal patterning, established as evolutionary events distinct from hindbrain segmentation

 





© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2004