Category Archives: Cell Biology

Augustinus Bader’s The Cream Review – MarieClaire.com

Welcome back to Worth It, a bi-weekly breakdown of the new beauty products Ive tested and adored: Im talking that drain-it-to-the-bottom-and-tell-my-friends-Ive-found-The-One kind of love. If it's featured here, consider this my permission to splurge on it. Read on for the product you dont want to live without, and catch up on the latest Worth It breakdown here.

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The Cream

$170.00

When you try The Cream, it comes at a price. You know, not your soul or an Infinity Gauntlet situation, but it's hefty nonetheless: $265 for 50 mls of the world-famous lotion. That said, its a skincare nerds dream. Bader, a professor and director of Applied Stem Cell Biology and Cell Technology at the University of Leipzig in Germany, is considered the top scientist in the world on the subject of regenerative tissue. His work, particularly his extensive studies on disfiguring burns and wound healing, led him to create the illustrious cream: The formulas secret is its TFC8 (Trigger Factor Complex 8), a proprietary blend that the brand says will activate the bodys own stem cells to promote major anti-aging benefits like minimized lines, even tone, and redness-reduction.

Ive been aware of the product's cult-status for years, but I honestly just tried it for shits-and-gigs. My skin is typically easily managed: I get ruddy and dry, and I tend to develop tiny, under-the-skin bumps on my cheeks after I sleep on hotel sheets (should I forget my Slip pillowcase). On rare occasions, Ill wake up with a pimple thats so mountainous and painful that I wonder if I contracted staph on the F train. But for the most part, I have good skin, and Im grateful for it. Thats why I typically seek out products that impart glowiness and hydration rather than something to totally overhaul my facebut that's exactly what The Cream claims to do.

Despite my dry skin type, I chose the original formula rather than the Rich Cream (I prefer lighter textures when it comes to moisture). I also didnt adhere to the proper instructions: Bader recommends using it for 27 days, minimum, with no additional skincare products except for cleanser, but I couldnt bring myself to abandon the rest of my arsenal. Instead, I used this as my last step in both my morning and evening routines.

My makeup went on smoothly in the mornings, but my off-dry skin never felt truly quenched before bed unless I applied a hydrating serum underneath. Meh. Yet, after about three weeks, I started to receive an onslaught of complexion compliments. I guess I havent looked as red recently, I thought. And I didnt have any active pimples, so I didnt think much of it. Ill take a good skin week anytime.

But one morning, mid-glam, I realized Id forgotten to apply both foundation and concealer and had gone straight for my Nudestix blush stick. I genuinely couldnt tell if Id put my complexion makeup on. Peter Parker getting stuck to the ceiling on his first morning as Spiderman? Same level of confusion. I took a closer look, skeptical. Do I look amazing?

Rather than that translucent, un-plump look my skin usually has in the morning, it appeared stronger, almost thicker. My fair tone was even and clear, and my typical little dark circles were nowhere to be found, seemingly buried underneath my reinforced complexion.

I do. I look fucking amazing.

I suddenly felt invinciblelike my own more stunning evil twin, or a supervillain whod traded their lovers heart for immense power and was rewarded with that golden, CGI glow-from-within that comes with Marvel-sanctioned immortality. I was transformed, and the expensive blue bottle on my dresser was the precious source of my new supremacy.

Ive been using The Cream ever since (about three months now) and my complexion has a whole new baseline. When people ask if it's really worth it, rather than offer a cheaper alternative like I typically do with products this expensive, I answer: This shit is wild.

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Augustinus Bader's The Cream Review - MarieClaire.com

Blue Mushroom Dye Used To Develop New Bioimaging Tool – Technology Networks

A new fluorescent tool for detecting reactive oxygen species based on a chemical found in mushrooms has been developed by scientists at the University of Bath.

Reactive oxygen species (ROS), such as free radicals and peroxides, are produced in cells under oxidative stress. Whilst present in healthy cells in small amounts, excessive ROS in cells are damaging and can lead to cancer and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease.

The scientists at Bath, collaborating with researchers in South Korea, have developed a new probe that biologists studying these diseases can use to see changes in cells under the microscope, helping them to understand the fundamental biological processes involving ROS.

They've created a family of new molecules - dubbed AzuFluor - based on azulene, a bright blue chemical found in the mushroom Lactarius indigo. It fluoresces when it comes into contact with a ROS in a one-way reaction, detecting tiny amounts of these reactive oxygen species.

Whilst most fluorescent probes absorb a single photon, AzuFluor absorbs two photons, meaning that two lower energy photons can be used to produce the same level of fluorescence. Using shorter wavelengths of light in infrared range means that the light can penetrate tissues more deeply without harming the cells. This technology has been shown to work in rat tissue; the researchers hope that in the future it could be used as a probe in the human body.

Dr Simon Lewis, Senior Lecturer in the Centre for Sustainable & Circular Technologies (CSCT) at the University of Bath, said: "AzuFluor is a much smaller molecule and simpler to make than other two-photon fluorophores. Its small size makes it easy to diffuse and transport into cells.

"We aim to make a family of these fluorophores that can be used in a range of cell imaging applications."

Professor Tony James, also from the CSCT at Bath, said: "This research has wide-ranging potential applications in cell biology and the pharmaceutical industry and is a great example of a fantastic international collaboration between chemists at Bath and Professor Hwan Myung Kim and his group at Ajou University in South Korea."

Reference:Murfin, L., Weber, M., Park, S., Kim, W., Lopez-Alled, C., & McMullin, C. et al. (2019). Azulene-Derived Fluorescent Probe for Bioimaging: Detection of Reactive Oxygen and Nitrogen Species by Two-Photon Microscopy. Journal Of The American Chemical Society. doi: 10.1021/jacs.9b09813

This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

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Blue Mushroom Dye Used To Develop New Bioimaging Tool - Technology Networks

Researchers discover new way to supercharge protein production – News-Medical.net

Medicines such as insulin for diabetes and clotting factors for hemophilia are hard to synthesize in the lab. Such drugs are based on therapeutic proteins, so scientists have engineered bacteria into tiny protein-making factories. But even with the help of bacteria or other cells, the process of producing proteins for medical or commercial applications is laborious and costly.

Now, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have discovered a way to supercharge protein production up to a thousandfold. The findings, published Dec. 18 in Nature Communications, could help increase production and drive down costs of making certain protein-based drugs, vaccines and diagnostics, as well as proteins used in the food, agriculture, biomaterials, bioenergy and chemical industries.

The process of producing proteins for medical or commercial applications can be complex, expensive and time-consuming. If you can make each bacterium produce 10 times as much protein, you only need one-tenth the volume of bacteria to get the job done, which would cut costs tremendously. This technique works with all kinds of proteins because it's a basic feature of the universal protein-synthesizing machinery."

Sergej Djuranovic, PhD, associate professor of cell biology and physiology and the study's senior author

Proteins are built from chains of amino acids hundreds of links long. Djuranovic and first author Manasvi Verma, an undergraduate researcher in Djuranovic's lab, stumbled on the importance of the first few amino acids when an experiment for a different study failed to work as expected. The researchers were looking for ways to control the amount of protein produced from a specific gene.

"We changed the sequence of the first few amino acids, and we thought it would have no effect on protein expression, but instead, it increased protein expression by 300%," Djuranovic said. "So then we started digging in to why that happened."

The researchers turned to green fluorescent protein, a tool used in biomedical research to estimate the amount of protein in a sample by measuring the amount of fluorescent light produced. Djuranovic and colleagues randomly changed the sequence of the first few amino acids in green fluorescent protein, generating 9,261 distinct versions, identical except for the very beginning.

The brilliance of the different versions of green fluorescent protein varied a thousandfold from the dimmest to the brightest, the researchers found, indicating a thousandfold difference in the amount of protein produced. With careful analysis and further experiments, Djuranovic, Verma and their collaborators from Washington University and Stanford University identified certain combinations of amino acids at the third, fourth and fifth positions in the protein chain that gave rise to sky-high amounts of protein.

Moreover, the same amino-acid triplets not only ramped up production of green fluorescent protein, which originally comes from jellyfish, but also production of proteins from distantly related species like coral and humans.

The findings could help increase production of proteins not only for medical applications, but in food, agriculture, chemical and other industries.

"There are so many ways we could benefit from ramping up protein production," Djuranovic said. "In the biomedical space, there are many proteins used in drugs, vaccines, diagnostics and biomaterials for medical devices that might become less expensive if we could improve production. And that's not to mention proteins produced for use in the food industry there's one called chymosin that is very important in cheese-making, for example the chemical industry, bioenergy, scientific research and others. Optimizing protein production could have a broad range of commercial benefits."

Source:

Journal reference:

Verma, M., et al. (2019) A short translational ramp determines the efficiency of protein synthesis. Nature Communications. doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13810-1.

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Researchers discover new way to supercharge protein production - News-Medical.net

Efficacy and Safety of Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy fo | DDDT – Dove Medical Press

Liming Wang,1,* Shigao Huang,2,* Shimei Li,1 Ming Li,1 Jun Shi,1 Wen Bai,1 Qianyun Wang,1 Libo Zheng,3 Yongjun Liu3

1Cell Therapy Center, 986 Hospital of Peoples Liberation Army Air Force, Xian, Shaanxi, Peoples Republic of China; 2Cancer Center, Institute of Translational Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Macau, Taipa, Macao SAR, Peoples Republic of China; 3Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine Institution, Yi-Chuang Institute of Bio-Industry, Beijing, Peoples Republic of China

*These authors contributed equally to this work

Correspondence: Shigao HuangCancer Center, Institute of Translational Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Macau, Room 3013, Building N-22, Taipa, Macau, Peoples Republic of ChinaEmail huangshigao2010@aliyun.comYongjun LiuStem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine Institution, Yi-Chuang Institute of Bio-Industry, No. 35, Jinghai 3 Road Economic-Technological Development Area, Beijing, Peoples Republic of ChinaEmail andyliuliu2001@aliyun.com

Background: The traditional anti-inflammation disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs) have limited therapeutic effects in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. We previously reported the safety and efficacy of umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell (UC-MSC) treatment in RA patients that were observed for up to 8 months after UC-MSC infusion. The aim of this study is to assess the long-term efficacy and safety of UC-MSC along with DMARDs for the treatment of RA.Methods: 64 RA patients aged 1864 years were recruited in the study. During the treatment, patients were treated with 40 mL UC-MSC suspension product (2 107 cells/20 mL) via intravenous injection immediately after the infusion of 100 mL saline. The serological markers tests were used to assess safety and the 28-joint disease activity score (DAS28) and the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) to assess efficacy.Results: 1 year and 3 years after UC-MSC cells treatment, the blood routine, liver and kidney function and immunoglobulin examination showed no abnormalities, which were all in the normal range. The ESR, CRP, RF of 1 year and 3 years after treatment and anti-CCP of 3 years after treatment were detected to be lower than that of pretreatment, which showed significant change (P < 0.05). Health index (HAQ) and joint function index (DAS28) decreased 1 year and 3 years after treatment than before treatment (P < 0.05).Conclusion: UC-MSC cells plus DMARDs therapy can be a safe, effective and feasible therapeutic option for RA patients.

Keywords: rheumatoid arthritis, umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell, cell therapy

This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited. The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution - Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License.By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. For permission for commercial use of this work, please see paragraphs 4.2 and 5 of our Terms.

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Efficacy and Safety of Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy fo | DDDT - Dove Medical Press

$13 Million Grant to Probe the Genome of Heart Cells Cardiology2.0 – Cardiology2.0

The genome of human cells looks a lot like a tangled ball of yarn, with tightly wound clumps from which myriad loose strands escape and loop out. But there is order to this tangleand growing evidence that the genomes 3D architecture influences the activity of its genes. Understanding the rules that control gene activity has been the object of a long collaboration between Gladstone investigatorsDeepak Srivastava,Benoit Bruneau,Katherine Pollard,Bruce Conklin, andNevan Krogan, and theirUC San Francisco(UCSF) partnerBrian Black. Together, they have already found many key regulators of gene activity in the heart.

Now, their collaboration has received a strong shot in the arm from the National Institute of Health with the recent award of a Program Project Grant totaling$13 millionbetween the labs for the next five years.

With this new support, the researchers will carry out a comprehensive probe into gene activity in heart cells and its intersection with the genomes 3D organization during heart formation.

It is truly gratifying to see our long collaboration supported in this way by the National Institute of Health,says Srivastava, president of Gladstone Institutes and project leader on this multi-investigator grant. This funding will allow us to dig deep into processes that are fundamental to heart cell biology, but that will also directly inform our efforts to design therapies for congenital heart disease, heart failure, and other heart diseases.

Heart failure is the most common cause of death in adults, and congenital heart defects the most common form of birth defects. These defects have been traced to mutations in a number of proteins that regulate gene activity in heart cells, including the proteins at the core of the researchers new proposal.

However, the investigation of the 3D organization of the genome is a relatively new area, particularly in the heart, says Srivastava, who is also a pediatric cardiologist and has devoted much of his career to understanding heart formation and congenital heart defects.

The work outlined in this grant is therefore expected to yield novel insight into heart disease and spur the design of new therapies. It will also help the researchers improve their ability to coax human cells into becoming various types of heart cells. This technology could eventually be used to regenerate failing heart tissue.

Gladstone Senior InvestigatorBruce Conklinwill lend his expertise in cardiac stem cell biology and CRISPR gene-editing technology to the project.

The researchers plan is to correlate gene activity and genome organization at the whole-genome scale and during multiple stages of heart formation. This will require enormous technological power. It will also require massive computing power and statistical analysis to store and sift through the large data sets the group will generate.

But the team is well-positioned to take on this challenge.

Our studies are facilitated by extraordinary new technology,says Bruneau, also a cardiovascular development specialist and the director of the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease.

The$13 millionproposal will leverage Srivastava, Bruneau, and Blacks deep understanding of heart development and disease, and enlist the state-of-the-art technologies and analytic tools that Pollard and Krogan have developed to collect and analyze information about biological networks on a grand scale.

Our team combines a remarkable array of expertise and technologies, says Srivastava, who is also director of the Roddenberry Stem Cell Center at Gladstone. It would be impossible for any one or two labs in isolation to pursue the complex goals we set out to achieve with this project.

Dynamic Protein Networks

The project focuses on a small set of proteins the team has previously shown to be crucial for the formation of a functional heart. These proteins, known as transcription factors, activate or silence genes by binding to specific DNA sequences in the genes vicinity.

The scientists have shown that cardiac transcription factors can associate with each other and with other proteins. Depending on the associations they form, they turn genes on, off, or somewhere in between, and different types of heart cells may form, says Black.

But for a transcription factor to turn a gene on or off, it needs to access the genes DNA sequence. Thats not as easy as it sounds, as much of the genome is wound up in tight coils that give no foothold to transcription factors.

Bruneaus team studies proteins that modulate the accessibility of DNA sequences along the genome, a process known as chromatin remodeling. These proteins unspool segments of the genome from the tightly wound coils, opening up stretches of DNA that transcription factors can bind.

Like transcription factors, chromatin remodeling proteins associate with each other and with other proteins, forming associations that vary depending on the cell type or the stage of heart formation.

Interestingly, Srivastavas group recently discovered that cardiac transcription factors may have long-range effects on the 3D organization of the genome. The genome is housed in a separate compartment of the cell, a spherical structure called the nucleus. Srivastavas team found that cardiac transcription factors may pull genome loops all the way to proteins lining the edges of the nucleus.

The picture that emerges from these findings is that of a vast network of proteins that coordinate gene activity and genome architecture, and change as the heart forms.

Now the researchers want to know how these networks form, how many proteins they entail, and what genes they affect.

Dynamic Lab Partnerships

To answer these questions, the team will analyze the associations between cardiac transcription factors, chromatin remodeling proteins, and their various partners during heart development. They will pair this analysis with a genome-wide survey of the genes these proteins target and of these genes activity.

Our overarching goal is to understand all the levels of gene regulation in developing hearts, from genes and transcription factors to chromatin remodeling and to genome organization within the nucleus, says Bruneau, who is also a professor of pediatrics at UCSF.

The researchers will use a battery of sophisticated techniques to capture the complexes that proteins form with each other or with DNA sequences and to record which genes are active or inactive in different types of heart cells.

They will leverage various models of heart development, including human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPS cells) that can give rise to heart tissue in the dish, or cells from the developing heart of mouse embryos. They will also use CRISPR technology and other genetic tools to insert mutations in heart cells and evaluate the impact of these mutations on the protein-genome networks.

Their success will depend on high-throughput data collection and analysis, and powerful statistics to guarantee the validity of the findings. Thats where Krogan and Pollard come in.

Krogans labwill contribute technology his lab developed to determine how proteins interact with one another in the celland how those interactions affect the interaction of proteins with DNA.

Pollards groupwill devise statistical methods to rigorously analyze the protein networks and gene activity profiles the researchers uncover through the lens of genetic causes of heart disease.

The biggest challenge will be to develop novel computational methods, including artificial intelligence tools, says Pollard, who directs the Gladstone Institute for Data Science and Biotechnology. This is the first time that scientists will integrate such diverse kinds of data to understand a disease.

Together, these tools will allow the researchers to reliably identify connections between protein networks and gene activity at all stages of heart formation, in the context of disease or healthy heart formation.

This project crystallizes a more than a decade-long collaboration across our labs, with a laser focus on fundamental concepts of gene regulation, says Bruneau.

We will learn how these concepts apply to the heart and to heart diseases, he adds, but we think they will also be relevant to other organs and sets of diseases.

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$13 Million Grant to Probe the Genome of Heart Cells Cardiology2.0 - Cardiology2.0

Different mutations in a single gene can have myriad effects on a person’s health – News-Medical.net

Mount Sinai researchers have found that different mutations in a single gene can have myriad effects on a person's health, suggesting that gene therapies may need to do more than just replenish the missing or dysfunctional protein the gene is supposed to encode, according to a study published in Nature Genetics in November.

"You have to fully understand the mutation to understand how to fix it," said Kristen Brennand, PhD, Associate Professor of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, Neuroscience, and Psychiatry at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and together with Gang Fang, PhD, Associate Professor of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, one of the lead authors of the study. The two researchers "have been collaborating for seven years on multiple projects that combine our complementary expertise in biology and informatics," said Dr. Fang.

The collaboration originated from Dr. Brennand's interest in the function of the gene neurexin-1, or NRXN1, in psychiatric disorders and Dr. Fang's technology expertise in the use of sophisticated techniques for analyzing different forms of individual genes. Much of the work was led by Shijia Zhu, PhD, formerly a postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Fang's lab, and Erin Flaherty, PhD, a former graduate student in Dr. Brennand's lab.

Patients with schizophrenia, autism, and bipolar disorder sometimes carry mutations in NRXN1. Until now, NRXN1 "had largely been studied only in mice. And, from the mouse studies, we know there are over 300 splice isoforms," said Dr. Brennand. "That means that this one gene makes 300 different proteins in the mouse."

The team set out to understand how NRXN1 functions in typical human neurons, and how different mutations might impact cellular function.

Dr. Brennand and her team started with skin samples from several patients at The Mount Sinai Hospital who had mental health diagnoses and carried mutated forms of the gene. They used these samples, as well as samples from participants without these diagnoses, to culture human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs)--cells with the ability to grow into any cell in the body.

The cells were then induced to grow into neurons. In the cells that came from patients with mutations in NRXN1, the scientists noted differences in the shape and electrical activity of the neurons as well as the rates at which they matured.

But that wasn't all. All people have two copies of the gene. If there is a mutation, it is usually only in one of those copies. The normal, unmutated gene still produces the healthy protein, but the mutated copy is unable to produce any protein, meaning the individual produces less of the protein than is necessary for normal function. The researchers figured that introducing more of the healthy protein would rescue the neurons, but this wasn't always the case.

Some of the mutations cause the second copy of the gene to produce a separate, mutated version of the protein. The researchers found that these mutated proteins may interfere with the action of the healthy protein. The team found that even cells that could produce enough of the healthy protein that they should have functioned normally would suffer if they were also exposed to a mutant form of the protein--and different mutations led to different problems.

Functionally, these mutant proteins seem to have a dominant negative effect. Overexpression of a single mutant protein in healthy neurons is enough to cause them to fire irregularly."

Dr. Kristen Brennand, Associate Professor, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

The study was small, and the gene variants the team studied are rare. In the future it will be important to tease out exactly how the variants impact function: do developmental perturbations lead to later differences in activity or vice versa? But both Dr. Brennand and Dr. Fang emphasized that the overall message is crucial for anyone hoping to use genetics to personalize medicine.

"I went into this really naively, thinking that all patients with deletions in this gene would probably show the same effect," she said. "What we learned is that if you want to move towards precision medicine, it matters not just what genes are impacted, but how they're mutated as well."

Source:

Journal reference:

Flaherty, E., et al. (2019) Neuronal impact of patient-specific aberrant NRXN1 splicing. Nature Genetics. doi.org/10.1038/s41588-019-0539-z.

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Different mutations in a single gene can have myriad effects on a person's health - News-Medical.net

The BMP ligand Pinhead together with Admp supports the robustness of embryonic patterning – Science Advances

INTRODUCTION

Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), originally identified by their ability to induce ectopic bone formation, are multifunctional extracellular polypeptides that belong to the transforming growth factor (TGF-) superfamily (1). Secreted BMP ligands bind as dimers to type I and type II receptors on the cell surface. The type II receptors become phosphorylated and then activate the type I receptors, which in turn phosphorylate the regulatory Smads (Smad1/5/8) (2). These phosphorylated Smads form complexes with Smad4, which then translocate into the nucleus to regulate the expression of BMP target genes (2). In zebrafish, bmp2b and bmp7a, which function as BMP heterodimers that activate Smad1/5, are initially expressed throughout the blastoderm shortly after the midblastula transition (3). BMP signaling in dorsal regions is subsequently attenuated by the BMP antagonist Chordin (Chd), and then a BMP signaling gradient forms along the dorsoventral (DV) axis and patterns tissues with high levels ventrally and low levels dorsally during late blastula stages and before the onset of gastrulation (3, 4). Although many positive and negative regulators of BMP signaling have been identified during early embryonic development (4), the molecular network that generates and maintains the BMP gradient is still not well characterized.

The formation of a morphogen gradient is a dynamic process and is influenced by the kinetics of morphogen production, diffusion, and degradation. During embryonic development, the formation of a morphogen gradient is often challenged by signaling component-level fluctuations, temperature differences, size variations, and/or unequal distributions of components between daughter cells (5). Therefore, morphogen gradients should be reproducibly formed with robust stability from one embryo to the next (5). Specifically, a robust resistance of DV axis formation to perturbations has been observed in various vertebrate embryos during classic grafting and ablation experiments. When grafted to the ventral-most part of a host embryo, where the BMP signal is maximally activated, the Spemann-Mangold organizer of Xenopus and the embryonic shield of zebrafish retain their ability to induce a secondary body axis at the site of the graft (6, 7). Furthermore, even when an amphibian blastula is bisected into dorsal and ventral halves, the dorsal half can give rise to a well-proportioned half-sized embryo (8). In addition, avian embryos can compensate for the removal of the organizer (Hensens node) during the primitive streak stage as evidenced by the reappearance of organizer markers (9). These observations support the idea that self-regulation occurs on the dorsal side of vertebrate embryos. On the other hand, transplantation of zebrafish ventral margin cells into animal poles induces the formation of secondary tails, indicating the existence of a tail organizer (10). Therefore, both the ventral and dorsal sides of vertebrate embryos are involved in self-regulation of DV patterning, but the underlying mechanism ensuring the robust BMP activity gradient remains one of the great unsolved mysteries in developmental biology.

In zebrafish embryos, ventral BMP signaling maintains expression of the vox/vent/ved transcriptional repressors, which restrict the expression of dorsal-promoting genes, including chd (11). In Xenopus, the expression of chd is negatively regulated by BMP4 (8). Therefore, the BMP signal gradient controlled by ventral BMP ligands and their dorsally secreted antagonist Chd is theoretically unstable, where a small change in the BMP signals or Chd expression would cause severe defects in the DV body plan (12). A BMP-like protein, anti-dorsalizing morphogenetic protein (Admp), is uniquely expressed in and secreted by the dorsal organizer (13, 14). Admp associates with Chd and facilitates Chd degradation (15). The expression of admp is repressed by BMP signals, and a depletion of the ventral BMP signals will increase admp expression, thus allowing the regeneration of a new BMP signal gradient. Therefore, Admp is an appealing candidate for ensuring the stabilization of DV patterning (8). Unexpectedly, knockdown of admp in Xenopus or zebrafish using morpholinos (MOs) only causes mild dorsalization (8, 12, 16, 17), and the distribution of the Chd protein remains largely unchanged (17), suggesting that there are other BMP-like members that compensate for the loss of Admp function. In addition, the dorsal halves of split Xenopus embryos still retain substantial DV polarity when BMP4 and BMP7 are depleted (8), indicating that unidentified BMP-like members may function in the newly induced ventral side and are transcriptionally up-regulated to compensate for the loss of BMP ligands.

The precursor proteins of BMP family members consist of three parts: an N-terminal signal peptide that targets the protein to the secretory pathway, a prodomain that mediates proper folding, and a C-terminal mature peptide containing seven highly conserved cysteines, i.e., cysteine knots, that form intramolecular disulfide bonds (18). In addition, an Arg-X-X-Arg sequence motif in the prodomain of the precursor proteins is hydrolyzed by serine proteinases to form mature C-terminal proteins that are subsequently secreted (18). There are at least 20 structurally and functionally related BMPs, including Decapentaplegic, Screw, and Glassbottom-boat in Drosophila and BMP2/4, BMP5/6/7/8, and BMP9/10 in vertebrates. Most of these BMPs play critical roles in embryogenesis and organ morphogenesis (1921). The characterization of previously unknown BMP members involved in embryonic development will be interesting and provide key insights into this developmental pathway.

The novel gene pinhead was originally isolated from a functional knockdown screen searching for genes involved in nervous system development and is expressed in the anterior neural plate of Xenopus neurula as a key regulator of head development (22). pinhead is located immediately upstream of admp in the genomes of various animals, ranging from arthropods to vertebrates (22, 23). This genomic configuration of pinhead and admp is important for mutually exclusive expression of these genes in Ciona embryos, which lack a structure homologous to the vertebrate organizer (23). In gastrulating Xenopus embryos, pinhead is expressed in an arc around the blastopore with a distinct gap corresponding to the dorsal mesoderm, which implies a possible role in the embryonic body plan (22).

In this study, we demonstrated that Pinhead is a secreted BMP-like ligand expressed in the ventrolateral margin and has ventralizing functions in the zebrafish embryonic body plan. Similar to Admp, Pinhead was also found to promote metalloproteinase-mediated Chd degradation. Expression of pinhead was notably increased in response to the inhibition or depletion of admp and vice versa. This seesaw-like expression of pinhead and admp establishes a well-orchestrated alternative mechanism for the robust generation of the DV axis. This is evidenced by the normal DV polarity exhibited by pinhead or admp mutants alongside the marked dorsalization displayed when both of these genes are absent. Last, the expression of pinhead and admp is negatively regulated by BMP signaling, where this negative feedback loop between BMP signaling and pinhead/admp is important for buffering against fluctuations in dynamic BMP signaling during DV axis formation. Therefore, we propose an alternative mechanism to ensure stable axis formation that couples pinhead and admp with system control based on opposing regulation of BMP signaling and pinhead/admp expression. This work will provide important insights into the mechanisms of robustness in organisms by the self-regulating BMP activity gradient.

Expression of pinhead and admp occurs in a mutually exclusive manner during Ciona and Xenopus embryonic development (22, 23). Admp is a BMP-like protein with important functions in the embryonic body plan (13, 14, 16). However, the developmental role of pinhead in DV patterning remains unknown. To gain insight into the functions of zebrafish pinhead [NM_205587.1, National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI)] during embryogenesis, we firstly characterized its expression during early embryonic development using whole-mount in situ hybridization (WISH) with an antisense probe. As shown in Fig. 1A, pinhead transcripts were undetectable before and during the sphere stage. Soon afterward, pinhead was expressed around the marginal zone but not the dorsal mesoderm, as indicated by costaining with goosecoid (gsc) (Fig. 1, A and B). During the midgastrulation stages, the expression of pinhead transcripts appeared in a DV gradient in the blastoderm margin (Fig. 1A). Abundant pinhead transcripts were consistently observed in the presomitic mesoderm, but not the axial mesoderm, at the bud stage and during somitogenesis (Fig. 1A and fig. S1A). pinhead transcripts were no longer detectable after the segmentation stages (fig. S1B). These data indicate that zebrafish pinhead may play a role in establishing ventral cell fates during early embryonic development.

(A) Expression of pinhead in wild-type zebrafish embryos was analyzed by whole-mount in situ hybridization. 128-Cell and sphere stages, lateral views; 30% epiboly (ep) and shield stages, animal pole views with dorsal to the right, and dorsal views with animal pole at the top; and 75% epiboly and bud stages, lateral views with dorsal to the right, and dorsal views with animal pole at the top. In the last panel, the embryo is slightly tilted upward to expose the tail bud. (B) Double in situ hybridization of pinhead (dark blue) and gsc (red) expression at the shield stage. In the upper panel, the animal pole view shows the relative positions of the pinhead and gsc domains. In the lower panel, the dorsal view displays pinhead and gsc transcripts in embryos at exclusive domains. (C and D) Embryos were injected with different doses of gfp or pinhead mRNAs. Representative pictures of different classes and statistical data are shown in (C) (lateral views with anterior to the left) and (D). Scale bar, 100 m. (E and F) The expression of dorsal (E, chd and gsc) and ventral (F, eve1 and vent) marker genes in gfp and pinhead mRNAinjected embryos at the indicated stages. (E) Animal views with dorsal side to the right in upper panels, and dorsal views with animal pole at the top in lower panels. (F) Animal views with dorsal to the right. (G) Expression levels of several dorsal-ventral genes were analyzed at the shield stage by real-time quantitative (qPCR). The expression levels of -actin were used as a reference to normalize the amount of mRNAs in each sample. Error bars indicated SD. Asterisks indicated statistical significance of difference, *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01, Students t test. (H) Analysis of the expression patterns of the dorsal neuroectoderm marker sox3 and ventral nonneural ectoderm marker gata2 at the 75% epiboly stage. Lateral views with the dorsal side pointing to the right. (I) The expression pattern of gata1 in gfp and pinhead mRNA-injected embryos. Lateral views with anterior to the left.

Next, the effects of pinhead overexpression on embryogenesis were assessed by injecting mRNA synthesized in vitro into one-cell stage embryos. Embryos injected with different amounts of pinhead mRNA exhibited dose-dependent ventralized phenotypes, characterized by the loss of dorsoanterior structures and the expanded ventral tissues at 24 hours post-fertilization (hpf) (Fig. 1, C and D), suggesting that Pinhead protein has ventralizing activity. In contrast to the impaired function of BMP2b by the addition of six amino acids at its C terminus in swirl mutants (24), the ventralizing activity of Pinhead was not obviously affected when a hemagglutinin (HA) epitope tag was fused to the carboxy end (Fig. 1D). Moreover, ectopic expression of Xenopus pinhead (NM_203534.1, NCBI) in zebrafish embryos generated similar ventralized phenotypes but did not result in macrocephaly (fig. S1, C and D), which had been observed in pinhead-overexpressed Xenopus embryos, suggesting an additional function of pinhead in the development of Xenopus nervous system (22).

In addition to the morphological changes, we also assessed the expression of several dorsal and ventral markers in embryos injected with 100 pg of pinhead mRNA. During the gastrula stages, injection of pinhead mRNA greatly reduced the expression of dorsal markers, including chd and gsc (Fig. 1, E and G). By contrast, the expression of the ventral markers eve1 and vent was notably expanded in response to injection of pinhead mRNA (Fig. 1, F and G). In addition, embryos injected with pinhead mRNA had a much smaller dorsal neuroectoderm (as indicated by sox3 expression), as well as an expanded ventral nonneural ectoderm (as indicated by gata2 expression) at 75% epiboly stage (Fig. 1H). At later stages, overexpression of pinhead in zebrafish embryos resulted in a slight expansion of the blood cell population within the intermediate cell mass, which is derived from the ventral mesoderm (Fig. 1I). On the basis of these observations, we conclude that Pinhead has ventralizing functions in the zebrafish embryonic body plan.

Zebrafish pinhead encodes a 316amino acid protein with a predicted hydrophobic N-terminal signal sequence (fig. S1E). Because Pinhead is a ventralizing factor and predicted to be secreted, we speculated that it is a BMP-like ligand. To address this hypothesis, we compared the sequences of Pinhead and several zebrafish BMP members, including BMP2b, BMP4, BMP7a, and Admp. Although the sequence of Pinhead displays little similarity to the other BMP ligands, it does contain a number of features characteristic of BMP proteins, including a consensus Arg-X-X-Arg proteolytic processing site and six characteristic cysteine residues conservatively located in the mature carboxyl terminal domain (fig. S1F).

To examine the biochemical properties of Pinhead, we expressed Pinhead-HA protein in human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293T cells and studied the conditioned medium produced by the transfected cells (Pinhead CM). Immunoprecipitation of Pinhead CM revealed that the Pinhead protein was present in the medium (Fig. 2A). To analyze the secretion rate of Pinhead, we treated HEK293T cells expressing Pinhead-HA with the protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide (CHX), and then immunoprecipitated Pinhead proteins in conditioned medium and cell lysates at different time points, respectively. We found that about 30% of Pinhead proteins were secreted within 4 hours, and more than 90% of Pinhead proteins were present in the medium after 12 hours of CHX treatment (Fig. 2, B and C). In addition, after 8 hours of CHX treatment, we detected more than 90% of Pinhead proteins in the CM produced by the suspended cells dissociated from the gastrula embryos injected with pinhead-HA mRNA (fig. S1, G and H), suggesting that Pinhead proteins can be more effectively processed in and secreted from zebrafish embryonic cells.

(A) The CM from HEK293T cells transfected with Pinhead-HA was examined using an immunoprecipitation assay. Pinhead levels in cell lysate were examined by Western blot as a positive control. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (B and C) HEK293T cells were transfected with Pinhead-HA plasmids. Twenty-four hours later, cells were treated with CHX (20 g/ml) for the indicated times. Then, the CM and CHX-treated cells were harvested for immunoblotting (B). Pinhead-HA protein levels were quantified and normalized to tubulin (mean SD, three independent biological repeats; C). Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (D and E) Pinhead-GFP fusion proteins were efficiently secreted from zebrafish embryonic cells. In (D), 50 pg of pinhead-GFP mRNA and 50 pg of mCherry-CAAX mRNA were coinjected into embryos at the one-cell stage. In (E), 10 pg of pinhead-GFP mRNA together with rhodamine-dextran was injected into one marginal blastomere at the 16- or 32-cell stage. All embryos were imaged using a Nikon A1R+ confocal microscope at the shield stage. Scale bar, 10 m. (F) Pinhead-HA proteins were enriched from the CM by immunoprecipitation and then subsequently separated on reducing and nonreducing SDS-PAGE. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (G and H) Hep3B cells were treated with Pinhead CM alone or together with BMP4 (G) or TGF-1 (H) for 1 hour and then harvested for Western blots with the indicated antibodies. The expression of -actin was analyzed as a loading control. In (H), wild-type embryos treated with 25 M SB431542 (SB) from the 16-cell stage and embryos injected with 100 pg of gfp or pinhead mRNA at the one-cell stage were also harvested at the shield stage and subjected to immunoblotting. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (I) Hep3B cells were treated with Pinhead CM alone or together with the indicated BMP type I receptor inhibitors for 4 hours and then harvested for Western blot with the indicated antibodies. Note that Pinhead CM-induced Smad1/5/8 phosphorylation notably decreased in the presence of BMP type I receptor inhibitors. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (J) Pinhead binds to BMP type I receptors. HEK293T cells were transfected as indicated with expression plasmids encoding Flag-tagged Pinhead and HA-tagged BMP type I receptors and harvested for immunoprecipitation with an anti-HA antibody. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (K) Western blots of total lysates from embryos injected with 100 pg of pinhead-HA mRNA. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (L and M) Extracellular Pinhead interacts with Chd (L) and Noggin (M). CM were prepared from HEK293T cells transfected with indicated plasmids. Immunoprecipitation assays were performed using an anti-Flag antibody. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (N) Overexpression of chd rescues Pinhead-induced DV defects. Embryos were injected with 100 pg of pinhead mRNA alone or together with 10 pg of chd mRNA at the one-cell stage and collected at the shield stage for in situ hybridization. (O) Expression levels of gsc and eve1 were analyzed at the shield stage by real-time qPCR. Error bars indicated SD. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01, Students t test. NS, not significant.

To further demonstrate that Pinhead is a secreted protein in vivo, we examined whether Pinhead is secreted in zebrafish embryos by coinjecting mRNAs encoding plasma membranelocalized mCherry-CAAX protein and Pinhead-GFP protein, in which green fluorescent protein (GFP) was fused to the C-terminal end of Pinhead, into one-cell stage embryos. The Pinhead-GFP fusion protein has a ventralizing activity similar to untagged Pinhead, as injection of equimolar amounts of pinhead-gfp and pinhead mRNAs resulted in similar percentages of ventralized embryos at 24 hpf (fig. S1, I and J). As expected, Pinhead-GFP protein was primarily intercellular at the shield stage (Fig. 2D). We also injected pinhead-gfp mRNA together with rhodamine-dextran into one marginal blastomere at the 16- or 32-cell stages. At later stages, the descendant cells could be indicated by rhodamine fluorescence. At the shield stage, we observed obvious GFP fluorescence at the periphery of the rhodamine-positive and rhodamine-negative cells and even the cells far away from the progeny of the injected blastomere (Fig. 2E). Immunoprecipitation of CM produced by the suspended cells from embryos injected with gfp or pinhead-gfp mRNAs showed that it was not GFP protein but Pinhead-GFP that could be detected in the medium (fig. S1K), ruling out the possibility that the high mobility of the protein observed in zebrafish embryos is due to a substantial amount of free GFP. Thus, these results suggest an efficient secretion and a long-range diffusion of Pinhead proteins in the developing embryos.

The mature form of Pinhead is one conserved cysteine residue less than other BMP ligands (fig. S1F). Therefore, we next examined whether secreted Pinhead protein could form covalent dimers that had been proved to be essential for downstream signaling events (3). Pinhead-HA proteins were enriched from the CM by immunoprecipitations and then subsequently separated on reducing and nonreducing SDSpolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), respectively. Immunoblotting analysis showed a single SDS-resistant band with an apparent molecular weight of about 70 kDa under nonreducing conditions, which migrated much more quickly under reducing conditions (Fig. 2F), implicating that most of the mature Pinhead proteins exist as disulfide-linked dimers in vivo. To determine whether secreted Pinhead activates an intracellular signaling cascade, we measured the phosphorylation levels of Smad1/5/8 in Hep3B cells in the presence and absence of Pinhead CM. We found that stimulation with recombinant BMP4 or Pinhead CM substantially enhanced Smad1/5/8 phosphorylation, and combining BMP4 and Pinhead CM further promoted this phosphorylation (Fig. 2G). By contrast, Smad2 phosphorylation (p-Smad2) in Hep3B cells was induced by incubations with TGF-1 but not Pinhead CM (Fig. 2H). In addition, overexpression of pinhead in embryos had no effects on p-Smad2 expression (Fig. 2H). These data not only demonstrate that Pinhead specifically triggers the BMP pathway but also rule out the possibility that Pinhead ventralizes embryos by inhibiting Nodal signaling, which is required for the formation of the organizer and the dorsal axial structures. Moreover, Pinhead binds to and signals through BMP receptors, as Pinhead CMinduced Smad1/5/8 phosphorylation was totally abolished in the presence of the selective BMP type I receptor inhibitor dorsomorphin or DMH1, and overexpressed Pinhead was coimmunoprecipitated with BMP type I receptors ALK2, ALK3, ALK6, and ALK8 (Fig. 2, I and J). We were not expecting to find an association between Pinhead and TGF- type I receptor ALK5 (Fig. 2J). However, this Pinhead-ALK5 association may not have biological significance, as Pinhead proteins did not induce phosphorylation of Smad2 in Hep3B cells and zebrafish embryos (Fig. 2H).

In zebrafish embryos, injection of 100 pg of pinhead-HA mRNA promoted phosphorylation of Smad1/5/8 during gastrulation (Fig. 2K). Pinhead protein efficiently coimmunoprecipitated with the BMP antagonist Chd and Noggin1 (Fig. 2, L and M). The pinhead overexpressioninduced DV defects in the shield-stage embryos, such as the reduction in gsc expression and the expansion of eve1 expression, were eliminated by coinjecting 10 pg of chd mRNA (Fig. 2, N and O). Consistent with these observations, at 24 hpf, injection of chd mRNA well rescued the ventralized morphology in Pinhead-overexpressing embryos (fig. S1L). Together, these findings indicate that Pinhead is a functional BMP ligand during zebrafish embryo development.

To examine the in vivo functions of pinhead, we generated a pinhead mutant by targeting exon 1 with the CRISPR-Cas9 system. The mutant was named ph49, as there was a 49base pair (bp) deletion that led to the loss of the translational start site (fig. S2A). We further generated the maternal-zygotic mutant by incrossing homozygous pinhead zygotic mutants. In situ hybridization experiments revealed an obvious decrease in pinhead transcripts in the ph49 mutants, providing further evidence that this mutant is a null allele of the pinhead gene (fig. S2B). Unexpectedly, ph49 embryos had normal morphologies at the end of gastrulation and at 24 hpf (fig. S2, C and D). In addition, we found no DV pattern defects in ph49 mutants for typically expressed dorsal and ventral genes (fig. S2, E and F). Previous studies indicate that a compensatory network may be activated to buffer against deleterious mutations, which was not observed after translational or transcriptional knockdown (25). Therefore, knockdown experiments were performed using an antisense MO (ph MO) that interfered with translation by targeting the pinhead sequence and efficiently blocking the production of the Pinhead-GFP fusion protein in embryos (fig. S2G). However, injection of 5 ng of ph MO into wild-type embryos did not result in any obvious DV defects (fig. S2, H and I). Therefore, the loss of pinhead does not disturb the formation of the DV axis, and an additional signal may be present in the embryo to compensate for the lack of pinhead.

The genes pinhead and the BMP ligand-encoding admp exist in tandem in the genomes of various animals, including zebrafish. These two genes have diametrically opposed expression patterns in the trunk epidermis in gastrulating Ciona embryos (23). We speculate that admp is an ideal candidate for buffering the loss of pinhead. In support of this hypothesis, contrary to the narrowed expression of admp in pinhead-deficient Ciona embryos (23), we found admp expression to be up-regulated in zebrafish ph49 mutants at the 30% epiboly and shield stages (Fig. 3A). To exclude the possibility that the increase in admp expression was merely an adaptation for gene loss, we injected 5 ng of ph MO into wild-type embryos. We found that admp expression also greatly increased in the pinhead morphants (Fig. 3B), suggesting that admp expression is repressed by pinhead. We also generated a null allele of admp with an 11-bp deletion in exon 1 (ad11) (fig. S3, A and B). Mild dorsalization phenotypes were observed in knockdown experiments with admp MO in Xenopus and zebrafish (8, 12, 16, 17). By contrast, the morphology and DV polarity were not affected in ad11 maternal-zygotic mutants compared to the wild-type control (fig. S3, C to F). It had been reported that admp morphants exhibited a notable enlargement of gsc expression domain and an evident diminution of eve1 expression (14). Unexpectedly, we did not observe any marked changes in the expression of dorsal-ventral markers in embryos injected with 3 ng of admp MO (fig. S3, G and H), which had previously been used (14). This inconsistency may be due to the different experimental conditions between the studies. pinhead expression was evidently expanded in ad11 mutants and admp morphants (Fig. 3, C and D). These results reveal that pinhead and admp are expressed in a seesaw-like fashion through opposing transcriptional regulation in the embryonic body plan.

(A and B) The expression pattern of admp in wild-type, pinhead49 homozygous mutant, and 5-ng pinhead MO (ph MO)injected embryos at the indicated stages. (C and D) The expression pattern of pinhead in wild-type, admp11 homozygous mutant, and 3-ng admp MO (ad MO)injected embryos at the indicated stages. (E) Pinhead binds to BMP1a. HEK293T cell-produced Pinhead-HA was coincubated with or without BMP1a-Myccontaining medium at 4C for 12 hours. The interactions between Pinhead and BMP1a were analyzed with an anti-HA antibody. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (F and G) Admp or Pinhead promotes BMP1a-mediated Chd degradation. HEK293T cellproduced Chd-Flag protein was incubated with the indicated CM at 4C for 12 hours, and then analyzed by Western blot with an anti-Flag antibody. Underlying data can be found in data file S1. (H and I) Morphological defects in ph49;ad11 double-mutant embryos. Note the ovoid shape at the bud stage (H) and the shortened posterior trunk at 24 hpf (I) in ph49;ad11 double mutants. Scale bar, 100 m. (J and K) The expression patterns of dorsal and ventral markers in wild-type and indicated mutant embryos. Note that the double depletion of pinhead and admp results in evidently increased expression of dorsal markers chd and gsc (J) and reduced expression of ventral marker eve1 (K) at the shield stage. (L and M) Wild-type and indicated mutant embryos were harvested at the shield stage for Western blots (L) and immunofluorescence assays (M) with the indicated antibodies. Note the distinct decrease in Smad1/5/8 phosphorylation in the ph49/ad11 double mutants. Scale bar, 50 m. Underlying data can be found in data file S1.

As shown in Fig. 3E, coimmunoprecipitation experiments revealed a steady binding of secreted Pinhead and Bamp1a, a Xolloid-related metalloproteinase that plays a pivotal role in proteolytic cleavage of Chd in zebrafish (26). The association of Pinhead with Bamp1a led us to examine whether Pinhead regulates BMP1a-mediated Chd degradation. Compared with the effects of the corresponding untagged proteins, overexpression of Admp-HA or Chd-Flag in wild-type embryos caused similar or slightly alleviated DV polarity defects at 24 hpf (fig. S4, A to D), suggesting that the addition of C-terminal epitopes has no obvious impact on their activities. Then, BMP1a, Chd, Admp, and Pinhead proteins were prepared by collecting the corresponding CM produced by transfected HEK293T cells. When BMP1a was coincubated with Chd, we detected a decrease in Chd protein, where adding Admp further facilitated this cleavage (Fig. 3F), suggesting that the secreted BMP1a functions well in our biochemical system. Pinhead was then coincubated with BMP1a and Chd in vitro, which promoted a reduction in Chd levels (Fig. 3G). These observations demonstrate that, similar to Admp, Pinhead promotes metalloproteinase-mediated Chd degradation.

To further confirm the roles of pinhead and admp in the formation of DV polarity in zebrafish embryos, we deleted the pinhead gene in the ad11 mutants using the CRISPR-Cas9 system. One mutant was obtained with an identical 49-bp deletion in the pinhead gene in the ad11 background. The ph49+/;ad11/ embryos develop normally and are viable and fertile, but ph49/;ad11/ embryos began to die 36 hpf, with a few surviving up to adulthood. Homozygous pinhead and admp double-mutant embryos were generated by crossing the surviving adults. Most of the ph49;ad11 double mutants had an ovoid shape at the bud stage and a clearly shortened posterior trunk and reduced yolk extension at 24 hpf, all of which are characteristic of dorsalization (Fig. 3, H and I). Furthermore, although injection of pinhead MO or admp MO into wild-type embryos did not lead to observable DV polarity defects at 24 hpf, coinjection of these MOs generated a dorsalized phenotype very similar to that of ph49;ad11 double mutants (fig. S5A), excluding the potential CRISPR-Cas9 off-target effects.

The dorsalization phenotypes in ph49;ad11 double mutants were further confirmed by the expression of several dorsal and ventral markers. As shown in Fig. 3J, we observed a marked expansion in the dorsal markers chd and gsc in ph49;ad11 embryos, while the expression of these markers remained unchanged in the ph49 and ad11 single mutants compared to the wild-type embryos. Meanwhile, the expression of the ventral marker eve1 was nearly abolished in ph49;ad11 embryos (Fig. 3K). Genetic deletion of these two genes consistently caused enlargement of dorsal-related tissues, including the prechordal plate (indicated by gsc) and notochord (indicated by ntl) (fig. S5B). There was also a large decrease in the blood cells located in the intermediate cell mass in ph49/ad11 mutants (fig. S5C). It has been reported that dorsalized embryos exhibit a slightly widened adaxial domain and expanded somite due to loss of swirl/bmp2b (11, 24). However, ph49/ad11 mutants showed reduced presomitic mesoderm (indicated by papc) at the bud stage (fig. S5D), which might reflect a role of pinhead and admp in somitogenesis, as pinhead transcripts were highly enriched in the presomitic mesoderm at the end of gastrulation (Fig. 1A). In addition, at the shield stage, phosphorylation of Smad proteins and the BMP gradient decreased in the ph49/ad11 embryos (Fig. 3, L and M). Consistent with previous reports that bmp expression is maintained through autoregulatory feedback loops (24, 27), we observed that, compared to the wild-type embryos at the shield stage, ph49;ad11 double mutants displayed reduced expression of bmp2b, bmp4, and bmp7a, which were not obviously changed in ph49 and ad11 single mutants (fig. S5E). In addition, by knockdown of admp in ph49 mutants or injection of pinhead MO into ad11 embryos, we observed similar dorsalization phenotypes, including the changes in the expression of dorsal and ventral markers (fig. S6, A to D), the repression of Smad1/5/8 phosphorylation (fig. S6, E and F), and the destruction of the BMP activity gradient (fig. S6, G and H). These results further confirm that pinhead and admp function together to regulate the formation of the BMP activity gradient and DV patterning in early zebrafish embryos.

It is well established that Admp functions in DV axis formation by enhancing Chd degradation (12, 15). Moreover, Admp overexpression could enhance the ventralized phenotype of din homozygous mutants, a mutant allele of chd (28), suggesting a role for Admp in BMP signal activation through a Chd-independent manner. It has been proved that Admp has BMP-like activity and signals via the ALK2 receptor (8). Given that Pinhead has similar functional properties to Admp, we asked whether Pinhead functions as a secreted scaffold aiding in Chd degradation and a ligand involved in activating BMP signaling during zebrafish DV patterning. We first examined the expression levels of endogenous Chd in shield-stage ph49 and ad11 mutants by Western blot analysis using a previously validated antibody (17). We found that the endogenous Chd protein heavily accumulated in ph49;ad11 double mutants compared to wild-type or single-mutant embryos (fig. S7A). In contrast, the expression of Chd evidently decreased upon injection of pinhead or admp mRNA (fig. S7B). To avoid the influence of changes in endogenous Chd expression induced by DV defects, we further examined the expression of exogenous Chd-HA protein in ph49;ad11 double mutants and wild-type embryos. All the embryos were injected with the same amount of chd-HA mRNA (50 pg) at the one-cell stage. Western blot results showed that the expression level of Chd-HA was up- or down-regulated upon depletion or overexpression of pinhead/admp (fig. S7, C and D). These results indicate that Pinhead can facilitate Chd degradation in vivo.

We next tested whether Pinhead also has a role in DV patterning when chd and bmp2b are depleted. As previously reported, injection of bmp2b MO into wild-type embryos caused a severe dorsalized morphology at 24 hpf, while the interference with chd function by MO generated a clear ventralized phenotype (fig. S7E) (29, 30). As expected, double depletion of chd and bmp2b gave a nearly normal morphology (fig. S7E). Injection of 100 pg of pinhead mRNA into chd/bmp2b-depleted embryos led to a ventralized phenotype, which was slightly serious in embryos injected with the same amount of admp mRNA (fig. S7E). Thus, similar to Admp, Pinhead might also regulate the establishment of DV regionalization via its BMP-like activity.

On the basis of these results, overexpression of either pinhead or admp would be expected to compensate for the loss of these two genes. Injection of 5 pg of bmp2b mRNA into the ph49;ad11 mutant embryos efficiently reversed the dorsalization morphologies (fig. S7F). Injection of either 100 pg of pinhead mRNA or 50 pg of admp mRNA also considerably alleviated the DV defects in the ph49;ad11 mutants (fig. S7F). Thus, the consistency in the molecular nature and the opposite transcriptional regulation of Pinhead and Admp provides an important compensatory mechanism by which to maintain stability of axial patterning when one of these genes is disrupted.

In Ciona gastrulas, pinhead is expressed in the posterior ventral epidermal cells, while admp is expressed in the dorsal epidermis. Their mutually exclusive expression is regulated at the chromatin level by a cis-acting mechanism that is widely conserved between animals (23). When the cis-acting repression is relieved, ectopic admp expression is observed in the ventral region (23). Expression of admp greatly increased in the ph49 mutant but did not spread into the ventrolateral regions, suggesting that the microdeletion in the ph49 mutant did not alter the chromosomal conformation around the gene locus (Fig. 3, A and B). Repression of admp by BMP signaling and the BMP-like activity of Pinhead prompted us to examine whether the up-regulation in admp expression in the ph49 mutants was due to a transient decline in BMP signaling induced by Pinhead deficiency.

As shown in Fig. 4 (A and B), wild-type embryos injected with bmp2b MO or treated with the BMP inhibitor dorsomorphin or DMH1 had remarkably increased expression of admp. Conversely, injection of bmp2b mRNA led to a reduction in admp expression (Fig. 4, C and E). In addition, the expression of pinhead was negatively regulated by BMP signaling, as knockdown of bmp2b induced and high levels of bmp2b inhibited its transcription (Fig. 4, A, B, D, and E). The increased expression of admp and pinhead in the corresponding mutants was reduced to a lower level than that in wild-type embryos by injection of 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA (Fig. 4, F to H), indicating a complete compression of the compensatory expression of pinhead or admp upon BMP2b overexpression. Therefore, we conclude that BMP signals negatively regulate pinhead and admp transcription. In addition, wild-type embryos injected with 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA displayed various ventralized phenotypes ranging from mild to severe at 24 hpf (fig. S8, A and B). Upon bmp2b mRNA injection, the ph49 and ad11 single mutants exhibited a similar ventralized morphology (fig. S8, A and B), further suggesting that the compensatory expression of pinhead or admp can make up for the gene loss in the corresponding mutants.

(A and B) The expression of admp and pinhead was analyzed at the shield stage by in situ hybridization (A) and real-time qPCR in bmp2b morphants and embryos treated with 10 M dorsomorphin or 5 M DMH1 from the 1K cell stage. Error bars indicated SD. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001, Students t test. UIC, uninjected control. (C and D) The expression of admp and pinhead was obviously decreased at the shield stage in embryos injected with 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA. (E) Embryos injected with 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA were harvested for real-time qPCR analysis. **P < 0.01, Students t test. (F to H) Overexpression of bmp2b inhibited the expansion of admp expression in ph49 mutants and pinhead expression in admp11 mutants. ph49 and admp11 mutant embryos were injected with 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA at the one-cell stage and harvested at the shield stage for in situ hybridization (F). The expression of admp and pinhead was also analyzed by real-time qPCR (G and H). Error bars indicated SD. **P < 0.01, Students t test. (I) The self-regulation of the BMP signaling levels in pinhead- or admp-depleted embryos. Tg(BRE:EGFP) transgenic embryos were injected with 5 ng of pinhead MO or 3 ng of admp MO at the one-cell stage and then harvested at indicated developmental stages for examination of gfp expression by real-time qPCR analyses. The expression of -actin was used as an internal control. Error bars indicated SD. (J and K) The dynamics of admp (J) or pinhead (K) expression in indicated mutants injected with or without 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA. The expression levels of admp and pinhead were individually examined by real-time qPCR at the indicated stages, and the expression levels of -actin were used as a reference to normalize the amount of mRNAs in each sample.

On the basis of the seesaw-like expression patterns of pinhead and admp, we speculate that, when the expression of one is disturbed in embryos, BMP signaling will temporarily be lower and expression of the other gene will be subsequently promoted to support the self-regulation of the BMP signaling levels for the embryonic body plan. To address this issue, MOs targeting pinhead or admp were injected into Tg(BRE:EGFP) embryos, in which a GFP reporter can reveal the dynamic changes in BMP activity during embryonic development (31). In support of our hypothesis, the results of real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis revealed an early partial loss of BMP activity in the morphants, which was dynamically compensated before the shield stage (Fig. 4I). The expression of admp in ph49 mutants or pinhead in ad11 mutants was gradually elevated compared to that in wild-type embryos (Fig. 4, J and K). The promotion of admp and pinhead expression may well be due to the temporary reduction in BMP activity in the single-mutant embryos, as coinjection of 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA notably suppressed the elevation of their expression (Fig. 4, J and K).

To further investigate whether BMP/Smad signaling directly represses pinhead and admp transcription, we amplified 1336 bp of the admp and 1516 bp of the pinhead promoter regions upstream of the translation start site of each gene and fused them to GFP cDNA to create reporter constructs (named 1336-ad-P-GFP and 1516-ph-P-GFP, respectively). The upstream sequence of admp drove GFP expression on the dorsal side of shield stage embryos, recapitulating endogenous expression of admp (Fig. 5A). Next, we generated serial truncations of the admp promoter and injected them into embryos. We found that the truncated promoter containing the 633-bp upstream sequence (633-ad-P-GFP) exhibited transcriptional activity in the dorsal region similar to the full-length promoter, while the 210-ad-P-GFP construct lost the ability to express GFP (Fig. 5A), suggesting that the region between 633 and 210 bp is an enhancer essential for admp expression. To identify potential BMP/Smad-responsive elements in this enhancer, we injected the 633-ad-P-GFP construct (100 pg) into wild-type and ph49 mutant embryos. The expression of 633-ad-P-GFP was augmented in DMH1-treated wild-type and ph49 mutant embryos (Fig. 5B), suggesting that the enhancer responds well to BMP signals. To quantitatively analyze the transcriptional regulation of admp by BMP signal, we generated a luciferase reporter plasmid (633-ad-P-Luc) by subcloning the 633-bp upstream sequence of admp into pGL3-Basic vector. As expected, 3- or 4.5-fold enhanced transcriptional activity of 633-ad-P-Luc was observed in pinhead defective or DMH1-treated embryos (Fig. 5C). Similarly, a BMP signal-responsive enhancer that specifically drove reporter gene expression in the ventral and lateral margin of the gastrulas was identified between 431 and 225 bp in the pinhead promoter (Fig. 5, D to F).

(A) The 633- to 210-bp region of the admp promoter was an important enhancer driving GFP expression in the dorsal side. Wild-type embryos were injected with various constructs as indicated at the one-cell stage and photographed at the shield stage. Animal pole views with dorsal to the right. Scale bar, 100 m. (B and C) Responses of the admp enhancer to BMP signal inhibition. Wild-type and ph49 mutant embryos were injected with 100 pg of the 633-ad-P-GFP (B) or 633-ad-P-luc (C) reporter construct at the one-cell stage and treated with or without 5 M DMH1 from the 1K cell stage to the shield stage. Scale bar, 100 m. ***P < 0.001, Students t test. (D and E) Ventral and lateral margin expression of the pinhead promoter was determined by an enhancer located between 431- and 225-bp upstream of the transcription start site (D), which was heightened at the shield stage in ad11 mutant and wild-type embryos treated with DMH1 (E). Animal pole views with dorsal to the right. Scale bar, 100 m. (F) The expression of -431-ph-P-luc in indicated embryos was examined by luciferase measurement. The relative luciferase activity in each sample was the mean with SD from three independent experiments. ***P < 0.001, Students t test. (G and H) Purified Smad1 bound specifically to admp probe B (ad Probe B) (G) and mutations in probe B abolished Smad binding (H). DNA-protein complexes were analyzed with a polyacrylamide gel and visualized by Typhoon FLA9500 Scanner. (I and J) Purified Smad1 directly bound to the wild-type pinhead probe B (ph Probe B) (G) but not the mutated probe (H). Electrophoretic mobility shift assays were performed similarly as in (G) and (H). (K to N) The mutated promoter reporters (633-ad-MTB-GFP, 633-ad-MTB-luc, 431-ph-MTB-GFP, and 431-ph-MTB-luc) showed a higher transcriptional activity than the corresponding wild-type reporter. Wild-type embryos were injected with 100 pg of indicated reporter constructs at the one-cell stage. At the shield stage, these embryos were photographed (K and M) or subjected to luciferase assays (L and N). Scale bar, 100 m. ***P < 0.001, Students t test. (O and P) Smad binding was essential for BMP signalmediated suppression of admp (O) and pinhead (P) transcription. Mutated reporter constructs (50 pg) were injected into wild-type and indicated mutant embryos at the one-cell stage, respectively. Wild-type embryos injected with 633-ad-MTB-GFP or 431-ph-MTB-GFP reporter were treated with or without DMH1 from the 1K cell stage. Note that these mutated reporters lost their ability to respond to BMP inhibition. Scale bar, 100 m.

Smad proteins physically interact with the promoters of their target genes to regulate gene expression (18). Specifically, Smad1/5 proteins, the intracellular downstream mediators of BMP signaling, directly bind to the GC-rich elements in BMP/Smad target promoters (32). There are two and four potential Smad1/5-bound GC-rich elements in the admp and pinhead enhancers, respectively (fig. S9, A and B). To explore the ability of Smad proteins to bind to these sites, we performed electrophoretic mobility shift assays using purified Smad1 proteins and synthesized probes containing presumptive Smad-binding sites. Smad1 specifically bound to admp probe B (ad Probe B) but not to the mutated probe with the GGCGCC to AAAAAA substitutions within the putative Smad1/5-binding site (Fig. 5, G and H, and fig. S9A). Meanwhile, Smad1 also bound to pinhead probe B (ph Probe B) but not its mutant (Fig. 5, I and J, and fig. S9B). When the proper mutations were introduced into each enhancer, the mutated promoters (100 pg of each) exhibited a remarkable increase of their transcriptional activities in wild-type embryos (Fig. 5, K to N), indicating a relief of direct repression by BMP/Smad signaling. Because the mutated promoters could activate much higher expression of reporter gene than their original promoters, we reduced the injection dosage to 50 pg to confirm whether they lose the ability to respond to BMP inhibition. We found that the GFP reporter driven by the mutated promoters was similarly expressed in DMH1-treated or untreated wild-type embryos and ph49 or ad11 mutants (Fig. 5, O and P). Together, these results demonstrate that Smad1/5 binds to the pinhead and admp enhancers to repress their transcription in response to BMP signaling.

Embryonic DV patterning displays substantial resistance to experimental perturbations and Admp has been proposed to aid in the self-regulation of the BMP signaling gradient and the regeneration of normal DV structures (8, 12). Because pinhead and admp are expressed under feedback regulations in a seesaw-like fashion and have compensatory functions in DV patterning, we presumed that both of these genes might be involved in the robust stability of axial patterning through fine-tuning of BMP signaling. To investigate whether pinhead and admp contribute to the buffering of BMP activity profiles against variations in gene dosage, we introduced bmp2b MO into ph49 or ad11 mutants and ph49;ad11 embryos injected with a rescuing amount of pinhead mRNA (improved ph49;ad11 mutants). As shown in Fig. 6A, injection of 1 ng of bmp2b MO induced a mild increase of chd expression in most wild-type, ph49, and ad11 embryos and caused a much stronger expansion of this dorsal marker gene in nearly 70% of the improved ph49;ad11 mutants, where the DV defects were significantly rescued by pinhead overexpression (Fig. 6, A and B). In response to bmp2b MO injection, the expression domain of chd even extended to the ventral regions in about 20% improved ph49/ad11 mutants, suggesting a much severe dorsalized phenotype (Fig. 6, A and B). Consistent with this, injection of 1 ng of bmp2b MO caused a more severe decrease in expression of the ventral marker eve1 in improved ph49;ad11 mutants compared to the control embryos (Fig. 6, A and C). These bmp2b morphants displayed different dorsalized morphologies (C1 to C5) at 24 hpf (Fig. 6, D and E). About 80% of the improved ph49;ad11 embryos showed a normal DV morphology (Fig. 6E). Upon injection of 1 ng of bmp2b MO, above 20% of wild-type embryos and pinhead or admp single mutants showed some mild cases of dorsalization defects (C1 and C2), whereas all of the improved ph49;ad11 embryos exhibited more severely dorsalized phenotypes (C3 to C5; Fig. 6E). Furthermore, a reduced amount of injected bmp2b MO (0.3 or 0.1 ng) led to marginal dorsalized phenotypes in wild-type and single-mutant embryos, while these subdose injections resulted in hyperdorsalization in improved ph49;ad11 mutants (Fig. 6, F and G). These findings indicate that pinhead and admp cooperatively confer robust resistance to the decrease of BMP signaling during DV patterning.

(A to C) The expression patterns of dorsal and ventral markers in the indicated embryos injected with bmp2b MO. The expression patterns of chd and eve1 were categorized as shown in (A), and the ratios were presented in (B) and (C). Note that injection of 1 ng of bmp2b MO into improved ph49;ad11 mutant embryos (injected with 100 pg of pinhead mRNA) led to much more severe dorsalized phenotypes at the shield stage than wild-type control and single-mutant embryos. (D to G) Double depletion of pinhead and admp strongly enhanced bmp2b MO-induced dorsalization. Indicated embryos were injected with different doses of bmp2b MO (1, 0.3, or 0.1 ng) at the one-cell stage and imaged at 24 hpf. Representative dorsalized morphologies (C1 to C5) are shown in (D), and their ratios are shown in (E) to (G). Scale bar, 100 m. (H to J) Double depletion of pinhead and admp stabilized DV patterns when BMP activity was elevated. Indicated embryos were injected with 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA at the one-cell stage and harvested at the shield stage for in situ hybridization with chd and eve1 probes (H). Their ratios of the categorized expression patterns of chd and eve1 are shown in (I) and (J). (K) Proposed model of the alternative mechanism for the robustness of embryonic patterning that couples pinhead and admp with system control based on opposing regulation of BMP signaling and pinhead/admp expression. In wild-type embryos, the expression of pinhead and admp is repressed by each other and by BMP/Smad pathways (the left panel). The negative feedback loop between pinhead/admp and BMP signals plays an important role in buffering against fluctuations in dynamic BMP signaling during DV axis formation (left panel). Meanwhile, when the function of pinhead or admp decreased or failed, the seesaw-like expression of these two genes will provide a well-orchestrated alternative mechanism for embryonic self-regulation (the middle and right panels). The arrows with dashed outlines in the middle and right panels indicate the quick up-regulation of pinhead or admp expression to compensate for the genetic loss of the other gene.

Because the expression of pinhead and admp notably decreased in bmp2b overexpression embryos (Fig. 4, C to E), these two genes might also play important roles when embryos are challenged with excessive BMP activity. If this deduction is correct, reduced expression of pinhead and admp should dampen the elevated BMP activity to some extent due to impeded Chd degradation and depletion of these two genes should further stabilize BMP activity profiles during DV patterning. Consistent with these predictions, injection of 10 pg of bmp2b mRNA led to severe ventralized phenotypes in above 90% wild-type, ph49, and ad11 embryos, which were obviously alleviated in about 40% improved ph49;ad11 mutants (Fig. 6, H to J). Moreover, our study proved that, similar to Admp, Pinhead also functions in DV patterning via its BMP-like activity (fig. S7E). To explore whether the BMP-like activity of Pinhead and Admp is involved in the robustness of embryonic patterning, we examined the expression patterns of gsc and eve1 in chd-depleted embryos at the shield stage. We observed that, upon chd depletion, the improved ph49;ad11 mutants showed a lower rate of severe ventralized phenotype than wild-type, ph49, and ad11 embryos (fig. S10, A to C), indicating that the over-activation of BMP signaling induced by chd depletion can be appeased through genetic inactivation of both pinhead and admp. These results also imply that Pinhead and Admp could act as BMP ligands to stabilize embryonic DV patterning. Collectively, these data demonstrate that pinhead and admp serve as a dual protection system for the robustness of embryonic patterning by buffering against disturbances in the dynamic BMP signaling (Fig. 6K).

Robustness is a ubiquitous property in organisms that allows a system to maintain its functions despite external and internal perturbations. These robust biological traits are often selected through evolution and facilitate evolvability (33, 34). One of the best-studied models of robustness in embryonic development is the normal production of gastrula DV patterns after experimental perturbations (510). However, the molecular nature of this self-regulating pattern remains one of the most challenging areas that remain to be delineated in developmental biology. It is well known that a BMP signaling gradient is established through ventral BMP signals and their dorsally expressed antagonist Chd, which forms along the DV axis to pattern tissues (4). Admp, a BMP-like protein expressed as part of the feedback regulation of the Chd/BMP system on the dorsal side of gastrulating embryos, is an appealing candidate in ensuring embryonic self-regulation (8, 12). Robustness can be enhanced by an alternative or fail-safe mechanism, where multiple means achieve a specific function, and the failure of one of them can be overcome by the others (33). However, whether there is an alternative mechanism to support the substantial DV polarity remains to be determined.

A previous study revealed that zebrafish admp morphants have an almost normal distribution of Chd protein (17). Consistent with this observation, the morphology and DV polarity are not affected in the ad11 mutants generated in this present study, suggesting that the loss of Admp function may be quickly compensated for by other BMP-like members. Xenopus ONT1, an olfactomedin-class secreted protein, was demonstrated to contribute to the robust stability of axial patterning with Admp in a synergistic manner (12). However, unlike Admp protein, ONT1 has no BMP ligand activity and acts as a secreted scaffold that enhances Chd degradation by facilitating enzyme-substrate association. The attenuation of ONT1 causes an increase in Admp expression but still leads to dorsalization phenotypes in Xenopus embryos (12), suggesting that ONT1 and Admp have non-overlapping functions during DV axis formation. In this study, our data indicate that zebrafish pinhead encodes a secreted BMP ligand with ventralizing functions during zebrafish embryo development. pinhead mutants had no DV pattern defects because the enhanced expression of admp fully compensated for the gene loss. Conversely, pinhead also responds to the decrease or depletion of admp to stabilize axial formation. Therefore, the seesaw-like expression of pinhead and admp establishes a well-orchestrated alternative mechanism for the robust generation of the DV axis. In addition, similar to Admp, Pinhead acts as a scaffold that promotes metalloproteinase-mediated Chd degradation. Thus, this alternative mechanism is mediated by the remarkable molecular similarities between Pinhead and Admp.

In Ciona embryos, pinhead is expressed in the posterior ventral epidermal cells, and MO-mediated gene knockdown experiments revealed that pinhead functions in the DV axis formation of the trunk epidermis (23). In Xenopus embryos, pinhead is expressed in the anterior neural plate of the neurula and genetic manipulation by MO injection showed that pinhead is a key regulator of head development (22). Because of a lack of expression of pinhead in the epidermal cells and the neural plate during zebrafish embryo development, it is reasonable that we found no defects in the formation of epidermal and neural tissues in our pinhead mutants.

An important unanswered question in developmental biology is how a self-differentiating morphogenetic field is established in the developing embryos. Classic embryological studies have demonstrated that admp expression is repressed by BMP signaling, and transcriptional up-regulation of admp plays a key role in compensating for the depletion of ventrally expressed BMPs (8, 28). Likewise, pinhead expression is remarkably increased in embryos injected with bmp2b MO or treated with BMP inhibitors, while it notably decreased in embryos overexpressing bmp2b. Although a rescuing amount of pinhead mRNA had been introduced into pinhead and admp double mutants, these embryos were more fragile to disturbances in the dynamic BMP signaling gradient, indicating that the opposing transcriptional regulation between pinhead/admp and ventral BMP signals serves as a negative feedback mechanism and is responsible for the robust pattern formation. On the basis of these observations, we hypothesize a new framework, where the alternative mechanism is coupled with system feedback controls to ensure embryonic self-regulation. This working hypothesis is further reinforced by the identification of functional Smad1/5 binding elements in pinhead and admp enhancers. However, it has been reported that admp expression is decreased in pinhead morphants, and pinhead expression is suppressed in admp-depleted Ciona embryos during DV axis formation of the trunk epidermis (23). Furthermore, BMP signaling has no effect on admp expression but is required for pinhead expression in Ciona embryos (23). Therefore, it is possible that the effects of BMP signaling on pinhead and admp expression may be context dependent.

Expression of admp has been observed in the dorsal organizer (13, 14). ONT1, which has been proposed to stabilize axial formation by restricting Chd activity, is also expressed on the dorsal side (12). In addition to the ventral and lateral region, bmp2b is also expressed in the dorsal organizer, where organizer-derived BMP2b represses chd transcription and helps control the Chd gradient during gastrulation of zebrafish embryos (17). It will be interesting to investigate whether organizer-specific bmp2b functions in the robust stability of DV patterning. However, our study showed that the expression of bmp2b in both the ventrolateral region and the dorsal organizer was not affected by single depletion of pinhead or admp, suggesting that bmp2b may not be involved in the compensatory mechanism for the robustness of embryonic patterning.

Our study revealed that pinhead is expressed in the ventrolateral margin of zebrafish gastrulas. The mutually exclusive expression and shared functions of pinhead and admp suggest that Pinhead can diffuse to the dorsal side as an extracellular signaling molecule, which is indirectly confirmed by the compensatory effects of pinhead up-regulation in admp mutants. We observed an efficient secretion and a long-range diffusion of Pinhead-GFP fusion proteins in the developing embryos. In embryos, a subset of extracellular secreted factors, such as xolloid-related, twisted gastrulation, and crossveinless 2, function ventrally to promote BMP signaling through a variety of ways. The expression of these genes is positively regulated by BMPs (4, 11), ruling out any potential compensatory roles they may have buffering morphogen profiles against variations. Meanwhile, BAMBI and Sizzled, secreted feedback BMP antagonists, are expressed on the ventral side as part of the BMP synexpression group and shape the BMP signaling gradient (3538). These BMP inhibitors may play additional roles ensuring reproducible DV patterns in the face of natural fluctuations (4). However, considering normal epidermal DV patterning occurs in BMP4/7-depleted dorsal halves of split Xenopus embryos and the formation of extra tails when cells from the ventral margin are transplanted into the animal pole of host zebrafish embryos (8, 10), an additional BMP-like member is likely up-regulated in the ventral region to compensate for deficiencies in BMP activity. Whether expression of pinhead is induced in the bisected embryos or the grafts to preserve the ventral identity remains to be determined.

In summary, this present study suggests that pinhead and admp serve as an alternative mechanism of embryonic self-regulation, where the functions of these two genes can be restored by modular feedbacks when one component fails. It is important to note that this alternative mechanism is coupled with system control on the basis of the opposing regulation of BMP signaling and pinhead/admp expression for coping with environmental perturbations. Pinhead is the only known BMP member expressed in the ventrolateral region that is suppressed by BMP signaling. However, no expressed sequence homologous to pinhead has been found in birds and mammals (22, 23). The identification of other BMP members with functions overlapping with Admp in animals that have lost pinhead gene over the course of evolution will be important for increasing our understanding of the molecular mechanism underlying self-regulative DV patterning.

Embryos and adult fish were raised and maintained under standard laboratory conditions. Wild-type embryos were obtained from natural matings of Tubingen zebrafish. Studies in this manuscript involving zebrafish embryo collection and analyses were in full compliance with the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at the Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (permission number IOZ-13048).

Mutant pinhead and admp lines were generated using the CRISPR-Cas9 system as previously described (39). Two guide RNAs (gRNAs) were designed to target the sequences 5-GGAGGTTGTGTGCTCGTG-3 and 5-GGTCGGAGGCGATCAGG-3 within the first exon of the pinhead and admp loci, respectively. The Cas9 mRNA and gRNA were synthesized in vitro and coinjected into one-cell stage wild-type embryos. For screening of the mutant alleles, the genomic regions surrounding gRNA-targeted sequences were amplified by PCR with the following primers: for pinhead mutants, 5-CATGTGGATTAAACACAAAGGC-3 (forward) and 5-GAAATACTGTAAATGGATTGAACGT-3 (reverse); for admp mutants, 5-TCAGGATCTCCTCGAGGACCACC-3 (forward) and 5-TTATCTTACATTTGTCGAAGAAG-3 (reverse). The amplified DNA fragment was purified for enzymatic digestion with T7 endonuclease I (M0302, New England BioLabs) or subjected to Sanger sequencing.

Confirmed founders were crossed to wild-type animals to raise F1 carriers for each mutant. Homozygous mutants were obtained by incrossing F1 fish carrying mutated genomic DNA. ad11 homozygous mutant embryos were injected with Cas9 mRNA and pinhead gRNA to generate germline mutants for pinhead in an ad11 mutant background. F1 animals were obtained by crossing the founders and ad11 homozygous mutants. Homozygous ph49;ad11 double mutants were obtained from the offspring of the ph49/;ad11/ adults.

Zebrafish pinhead was cloned into pCS2(+) vectors containing a C-terminal HA or FLAG tag for eukaryotic expression. For Pinhead-GFP, the sequence encoding GFP protein was inserted downstream from the pinhead coding sequence with an EFLQDIIDGSPGLE linker separating the fluorescent protein and the Pinhead protein. C-terminal epitope-tagged Admp, Chd, Noggin1, and Bmp1a were cloned in pCS2-Flag, pCS2-HA, or pCS2-Myc vectors. All the resulting constructs were confirmed by sequence analysis.

HEK293T cells were cultured in Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum in a 37C humidified incubator with 5% CO2. Transfection was performed using Lipofectamine 2000 (11668019, Invitrogen) according to the manufacturers instructions. Once the HEK293T cells transfected with constructs expressing secreted proteins, such as Pinhead, Chd, and BMP1a, reached 80% confluency, they were washed three times with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and cultured in serum-free DMEM for 24 hours. CM was then collected from each sample and centrifuged at 3000g for 5 min, filtered through a 0.22-m filter, and concentrated to 10% of the original volume using Centriplus concentrators (Amicon).

Capped mRNAs were synthesized in vitro for pinhead, pinhead-HA, pinhead-GFP, mCherry-CAAX, admp, bmp2b, and gfp from the corresponding linearized plasmids using the mMessage mMachine kit (Ambion). The following MOs were synthesized by Gene Tools and resuspended in nuclease-free water: ph MO (5-ACTGACAGCAGTAAATCCATAGTCC-3), admp MO (ad MO; 5-TGGACAACATTGTAAAGAACATTGC-3) (14), bmp2b MO (5-CGCGGACCACGGCGACCATGATC-3) (30), and chd MO (5-ATCCACAGCAGCCCCTCCATCATCC-3) (29). The mRNA and MOs were injected into the yolk, while plasmid DNA was injected into the cytoplasm of one-cell stage embryos.

Digoxigeninuridine triphosphatelabeled and fluorescein-labeled antisense RNA probes were transcribed using the MEGAscript Kit (Ambion) according to the manufacturers instructions. WISH was performed according to previously published methods (39). For double in situ hybridization, antidigoxigenin-peroxidase (POD) (11633716001, Roche) and antifluorescein-POD (11426346910, Roche) were used as primary antibodies to detect digoxigenin-labeled pinhead probe and fluorescein-labeled gsc probe, respectively.

To block BMP signaling, embryos were treated with 10 M dorsomorphin (P5499, Sigma) or 5 M DMH1 (D8946, Sigma) at the 1K-cell stage in the dark, and then were collected at the shield stage for WISH.

Real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) was performed to check mRNA expression levels of the tested genes. Total RNA was extracted with Trizol (Invitrogen) and complementary DNAs were synthesized with high-efficiency reverse transcriptase Revertra Ace (Toyobo). A Biorad CFX96 PCR system was employed to perform real-time PCR using SYBR Premix Ex Taq dye (Takara). The primer sequences were as follows: for -actin, 5-ATGGATGATGAAATTGCCGCAC-3 (forward) and 5-ACCATCACCAGAGTCCATCACG-3 (reverse); for gsc, 5-GAGACGACACCGAACCATTT-3 (forward) and 5-CCTCTGACGACGACCTTTTC-3 (reverse); for chd, 5-TAGACTGCTGTAAGGAGTGTCCTC-3 (forward) and 5-CCATGAAGTCCTCTATGCATTCCG-3 (reverse); for eve1, 5-GCGAACTGGCGGCAGCCCTTAACT-3 (forward) and 5-GTAGGTCGATGGAGGCAGGTGCAAAG-3 (reverse); for vent, 5-GCAAGTTCTCAGTGGAGTGGCT-3 (forward) and 5-TCTGATCGCAGGTGAATTTGGT-3 (reverse); for pinhead, 5-AGTCCAGTGAATGTAGATG-3 (forward) and 5-CTCTCGCAGACCTTCATACAG-3 (reverse); for admp, 5-TCATGTTGTATGCAATGTTC-3 (forward) and 5-GTGACTCCGTCGACATCAGC-3 (reverse); for gfp, 5-TGAAGTTCATCTGCACCACCGGCAA-3 (forward) and 5-CCAGGATGTTGCCGTCCTCCTTGAA-3 (reverse).

For immunoprecipitation assays, HEK293T cells were transfected with the indicated plasmids. Cells were harvested 48 hours after transfection and lysed with TNE lysis buffer [10 mM tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, and 0.5% Nonidet P-40] containing a protease inhibitor cocktail. Immunoprecipitation assays were performed on lysates and collected CM as previously described (39).

For immunoblotting, affinity-purified anti-Flag (F2555, Sigma), anti-HA (CW0092A, CW), anti-Myc (M047-3, MBL), antiphospho-Smad1/5/8 (9511, Cell Signaling Technology), anti-Smad1/5/8 (ab72504, abcam), antiphospho-Smad2/3 (3101, Cell Signaling Technology), anti-Smad2/3 (3102, Cell Signaling Technology), anti-Chd (GTX128209, GeneTex), and anti-actin (SC1615, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) antibodies were used.

Embryos were collected at the shield stage, fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde overnight, washed with PBS containing 0.1% Tween 20 for 30 min, blocked with 1% bovine serum albumin for 1 hour at room temperature, and then incubated with antiphospho-Smad1/5/8 (1:200; 9511, Cell Signaling Technology) for 24 hours at 4C. After washing with PBS three times for 5 min each, the samples were incubated with a donkey anti-rabbit secondary antibody conjugated to DyLight 594 (1:500; 711-585-152, Jackson ImmunoResearch) overnight at 4C. All immunofluorescence images were captured using a Nikon A1R+ confocal microscope with the same settings for all samples within each experiment.

An in-frame insertion of the cDNA of the full human Smad1 gene with a glutathione S-transferase (GST) tag into the plasmid pGEX-4 T-1 was performed, and the resulting recombinant plasmid was transformed into Escherichia coli strain BL21. GST-tagged Smad1 protein expression was induced using 1 mM isopropyl--d-thiogalactopyranoside, and the resulting protein was purified with glutathione Sepharose 4B beads (GE Healthcare) according to the manufacturers instructions. Protein was digested by thrombin and dialyzed against buffer I [10 mM tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), and 0.2 M NaCl] at 4C overnight. Proteins were brought to a final concentration of 200 g/ml.

Electrophoretic mobility shift assays were performed as follows. Mixtures of purified Smad1 (10 ng) protein and 0.5 ng of carboxyfluorescein (FAM)labeled probes were incubated at room temperature for 30 min in a 10-l reaction volume. The reaction buffer contained 25% glycerol, 50 mM KCl, 0.5 mM EDTA, 10 mM DTT, and 5 mM tris-HCl and had a pH of 8.0. The mixtures were resolved on a 6% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel (60:1 acrylamide-to-bisacrylamide ratio) containing 5% glycerol in 0.5 tris-borate EDTA buffer. The gels were visualized using a Typhoon FLA9500 Scanner.

For detection and quantification of pinhead or admp promoter activity in zebrafish embryos, the luciferase reporter construct DNA was mixed with Renilla luciferase reporter DNA in a ratio of 10:1. Wild-type and mutant embryos were injected with 100 pg of the DNA mixture at the one-cell stage. To inhibit BMP signal transduction, embryos were treated with or without 5 M DMH1 at the 1K-cell stage and then lysed with passive lysis buffer at the shield stage for detecting luciferase activities. Each luciferase reporter assay was performed in triplicate, and the data represent the mean SD of three independent biological repeats after normalization to Renilla activity.

Students t tests (two-tailed, unequal variance) were performed to analyze all datasets (Microsoft Excel software). At a minimum, experiments were performed in triplicate. All the group values are expressed as the mean SD. Results were considered statistically significant at P < 0.05.

Acknowledgments: We are grateful to members of the Q. Wang laboratory for assistance and discussion. Funding: This work was supported by grants from the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2016YFA0100503 and 2018YFA0800200), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81921006, 31571501, and 91739101), and the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDA16000000). Author contributions: Y.Y. performed most of the experiments and analysis. Y.Y. and Q.W. conceived and designed the experiments and wrote the manuscript. Q.W. supervised the entire project. All authors reviewed and commented on the manuscript. Competing interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests. Data and materials availability: All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.

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The BMP ligand Pinhead together with Admp supports the robustness of embryonic patterning - Science Advances

Alzheimer’s study shows promise in protecting brain from tau – Newswise

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Newswise In the wake of recent disappointments over clinical trials targeting amyloid plaque build-up in Alzheimers disease, researchers are focusing more attention on misfolded tau protein, another culprit in brain diseases that cause dementia.

New research published inScience Translational Medicinefinds that targeting abnormal tau through the suppression of a gene calledMSUT2(mammalian suppressor of tauopathy 2) shows promise.

Tau, like amyloid protein,is another substance that builds up in Alzheimer's disease and damagesbraincells. However, clinical trials targeting tau have been far less numerous in part because tau-targeted drugs have been hard to find.

In this study, researchers concluded that suppressing MSUT2 might protect people from Alzheimers disease as long as the RNA binding protein PolyA Binding Protein Nuclear 1 (PABPN1) is not depleted. MSUT2 and PABPNI normally work together closely to regulate the biology of tau in the brain.

If you inhibit MSUT2 and dont affect PABN1, that protects against the effects of tau pathology, said senior author Brian Kraemer, a research associate professor of medicine in the Division of Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine. He is also a scientist at the Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System.

Kraemer said his team sees their role as the person kicking the ball down field to provide other researchers and drug companies an opportunity to move the ball towards the ultimate goal: A treatment or cure for Alzheimers disease.

Pharmaceutical companies have heavily invested in going after amyloid but so far these efforts havent moved the needle on dementia treatments, he said. I think the field needs to think about targeting amyloid and tau together because both amyloid and tau act together to kill neurons in Alzheimers disease.

Senior author Jeanna Wheeler, a research scientist at the Seattle Institute for Biomedical and Clinical Research and the VA, said whats novel about the study is the discovery of the role of the MSUT2 gene.

"We discovered MSUT2 originally in a completely unbiased way by looking for anything that could make worms resistant to pathological tau protein. Now we have shown that this gene can also affect tau toxicity in mice, and also that there are differences in MSUT2 in human Alzheimer's patients," she said. "If we can use MSUT2 in the future as a drug target, this would be a completely novel approach for treating Alzheimer's and other related disorders."

The significance of tau

The study also brings more attention to the role of tau pathology in Alzheimers disease.

The healthy human brain contains tens of billions of specialized cells or neurons that process and transmit information. By disrupting communication among these cells, Alzheimers disease results in loss of neuron function and cell death.

Previous studies have shown that abnormal tau burden correlates strongly with cognitive decline in Alzheimers disease patients, but amyloid does not. Some dementia disorders, such as frontotemporal lobar degeneration, may have only abnormal tau with no amyloid deposits.

If you could protect the brain from tau alone, you may provide substantial benefit for people with Alzheimers disease, Kraemer said. Likewise, targeting tau in tangle-only Alzheimers disease-related dementia disorders, like frontotemporal lobar degeneration, will almost certainly be beneficial for patients.

Study went from worms to mice

This study follows previous work by these researchers that showed very similar results using the wormC. elegans. Worms go from egg to adult in three days so it was easier to do experiments on the biology of aging rapidly. Although worms dont have complex cognitive functions, their movement is affected by tau buildup. Researchers found that they could cure the worm by knocking out the wormsut-2gene.

The more recent study applied the experiment to mice, whose evolutionary distance to humans is much smaller than the distance between worms and humans.

The researchers knocked out theMSUT2gene in mice, thereby preventing the formation of the tau tangles that kill off brain cells. This lessened learning and memory problems as well.

While examining autopsy brain samples from Alzheimers patients, the researchers found that cases with more severe disease lacked both MSUT2 protein, and its partner protein, PABPN1. This finding suggests that neurons that lose the MSUT2 -PABPN1 protein partnership may simply die during a patients life.

Moreover, mice lacking MSUT2 but possessing a normal complement of PABPN1 were strongly protected against abnormal tau and the resulting brain degeneration. Therefore, the researchers concluded that the key to helping people with abnormal tau buildup is blocking MSUT2 while preserving PABPN1 activity.

The study was funded by the Department of Veterans Affairs and the National Institute on Aging ( grant nos. 101BX002619,101BX007080,RF1AG055474,R01NS064131,P01AG017856,P50AG05136). Research involved investigators from the University of Washingtons School of MedicineAlzheimers Disease Research Center, University of Pennsylvania Center for Neurodegenerative Disease, and Michigan State University.

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Alzheimer's study shows promise in protecting brain from tau - Newswise

Unbiased Report Exposes the Unanswered Questions on Different Types of Cells in Biology – Rising Sun Chatsworth

This course of action is known as Apoptosis. The findings are reported in Cell. There are two sorts of ER.

Some malignant tumors may be caused by exposure to asbestos. The way the secretion becomes processed 2. There are some unicellular eukaryotes also.

There is an assortment of subtypes present within the immune system that have the ability to secrete distinctive cytokines based on the immune response occurring, write my essay however these are beyond the range of this report. Theres a enormous selection of distinct forms of cells but all of them have some common characteristics. There are several different types, sizes, and shapes of cells within the body.

This type is fundamental when it has to do with healing brain injuries. There are hundreds and hundreds of different forms of eukaryotic cells. You will likely devote some time in the laboratory studying the many portions of the cell, and youll want to learn how to label a mobile diagram with the appropriate cell components.

Last, a broad global effort will be necessary as a result of biological reality that the international wisdom and insights gained from the differences in the dimensions of https://au.payforessay.net/editing-service populations in various continents should enrich the undertaking. There is a vast scope of cells on the Earth that survive differently from one another and execute unique varieties of function. All living things are composed of cells.

FOR and NEXT statements are utilized to create loops that you are able to then repeat a particular number of times. A degree generally biology can likewise be a terrific option if you would like to teach high school biology, and numerous schools offer you this degree with an alternative for a teaching credential. There are two primary types.

The institute carries out a big selection of programs to inform policy and enhance practice. It might be a stand-alone major or an option for a certain track in a overall biology major. You can discover the links to MS Word template and LaTeX template of every one of the journal here.

With these techniques scientists have been in a position to study cells called fibroblasts that are a portion of connective tissue. This isnt https://scholar.cu.edu.eg/ the case with our very own adult stem cells. An array of unique cells regulate and manage the functions of the nervous system.

Sometimes, in the event the infants blood has an antigen that the mothers blood doesnt, her immune system will observe the infants antigen as foreign and respond by attempting to eradicate it like it were a dangerous pathogen. They also do not have a nucleus. They comprise the majority of these cells.

Some sorts of cell signaling are intracellular, while some are intercellular. These signals may also travel short distances outside the target cell and affect near-by cells.

The cytoplasm has structures that consume and transform power and do the cells functions. A protein is an instance of a macromolecule as a mitochondrion is a good example of an organelle. Fibrous proteins are usually elongated and insoluble.

Theyre secreted to the small intestine where theyre activated by removing or cleaving off a little part of the protein. The sperm doesnt have many organelles that are typically seen in the majority of cells.

Phagocytosis is the principal method employed by the body to get rid of completely free microorganisms in the blood and tissue fluids. Smooth muscle doesnt have sarcomeres. They cannot locate tissue as they are just examine the surface portion of the epidermis.

Such a tumor is normally found on each the frontal or atemporal lobes. The role of microvilli is to raise the surface region of the cell. There are 4 major kinds of T cells.

From time to time, though, this growth can get unregulated and result in a mass of cells. Theres regular movement of proteins using these compartments. There are 3 sorts of muscle cells.

PCR may be used to ascertain how many copies of a gene are found in a cell. The activity and stimulation of the reporter gene is contingent on the optimum mixture of that with the right promoter. The specificity of an enzyme is dependent on its distinctive 3D structure.

Distinct pigments trigger various functions. Sometimes it is essential to inhibit an enzyme to decrease a reaction rate, and theres more than 1 way for this inhibition to occur. It is one such catalyst which is commonly known as the biological catalyst.

You are likely familiar with the form of bacteria that may cause you to get sick. The amino acids that compose the active site of an enzyme arent contiguous to one another along the principal amino acid sequence. Different types of enzyme Your entire body contains about 3,000 unique enzymes, every one of which accelerates the reaction of a specific protein product.

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Primers are created by the enzyme DNA primase. The activity and stimulation of the reporter gene is contingent on the optimum mixture of that with the right promoter. Covalent inhibition requires the chemical modification of the enzyme so that its no longer active.

The malignant tumors call for a more intensive kind of chemotherapy and a number of medicines to keep the tumor in check and eliminate it wholly. In some instances, a protein may include a non-peptide group. Dont use a 3-D formula.

You are likely familiar with the form of bacteria that may cause you to get sick. In some instances, using ATP could possibly be indirect. Based on the kind of the plants product that is to be used and the sort of the enzyme applied, the fermented product varies.

This site involved with catalysis is known as the catalytic website. Model organisms each have some distinct experimental advantages that have enabled them to turn into popular among researchers. There are a couple groups of organisms that are mixotrophs.

In reality, several of the species within the Archaea domain are observed within hydrothermal vents. It is additionally the only organelle thats capitalized. Genes arent only passed down throughout plants, but theyre also passed down through animal reproduction too.

FOR and NEXT statements are utilized to create loops that you are able to then repeat a particular number of times. A degree generally biology can likewise be a terrific option if you would like to teach high school biology, and numerous schools offer you this degree with an alternative for a teaching credential. Announcements regarding academic activities like conferences are published free of charge.

You might have heard of folks that are lactose intolerant, or you can suffer from this problem yourself. Its a dangerous world out there there are many things that may damage DNA, and actually your DNA is being damaged all of the time. There arent many animals that could regenerate their body parts.

In the analysis, researchers went through each cell type and used a number of tedious approaches to estimate the amount of each type. Developmental processes are extremely evident during the practice of metamorphosis. Discuss why biologists may have a hard time classifying this organism.

Cell signaling can happen through numerous unique pathways, but the general theme is that the actions of one cell influence the use of another one. The cell is the fundamental unit of life. This movement is a consequence of cytoplasmic streaming.

Cancer progression is an intricate procedure, and exosomes appear to get involved with every stage of development. Synthetic biology intends to design and make full genetic systems that may be put into place in an organism to be able to execute a self-regulated endeavor. They are the basic unit of life.

Based on the quantity of exposure, radiolysis can create plenty of toxic free radicals in the cell, which ends in lysis. As stated above, archaebacteria are an extremely old kind of prokaryotic cells. The material our entire body uses to develop new cells comes from the food that we eat.

Here some cells within this epithelium do not reach until the free surface. Tissues are groups of cells with a similar structure and act with each other to carry out a particular function. There might be various sub-tissues within each one of the main tissues.

We have around 200 different cell types in our entire body, therefore we have to see that theres a very good likelihood that if we target an antigen that is created by the tumor, therell be other cells which are also being attacked as well just since they share the identical antigen. These, together with carbohydrates connected to the integral proteins, are considered to function in the recognition of self.

These lipid layers consist of several fatty acid building blocks. Theyre also the structural elements of flagella and cilia. The inner membrane is folded to raise the surface area and so also boost the mitochondrions capability to make ATP.

For instance, they supply a whole image of a zebrafish embryo. The sperm doesnt have many organelles that are typically seen in the majority of cells.

When you take into consideration the huge picture, it seems sensible a muscle cell would differ from a nerve cell or a bone cell. Smooth muscle doesnt have sarcomeres. Without muscle cells, you wouldnt have the ability to move!

The previous type has an important part in the muscular regeneration process because it will help to create new muscle fibers or muscle nuclei. Their main purpose is to serve as a form of wrapper for those synapses located at the border area between the CNS and the remainder of the body. There are 4 major kinds of T cells.

From time to time, though, this growth can get unregulated and result in a mass of cells. Theres regular movement of proteins using these compartments. Every cell is different but theres a simple structure thats common to all cells.

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Theres a lot more to cell biology. It is whats usually called ovarian cancer as such. Generally speaking though, one particular DNA error here or there isnt sufficient to trigger cancer.

In sexually reproducing animals, it is ordinarily essential to minimize the genetic information before fertilization. The way the secretion becomes processed 2. All eukaryotic organisms fall beneath this domain.

There is an assortment of subtypes present within the immune system that have the ability to secrete distinctive cytokines based on the immune response occurring, however these are beyond the range of this report. Theres a enormous selection of distinct forms of cells but all of them have some common characteristics. At the moment, there isnt any consensus view on the root cause of aging.

The term tissue comes out of a kind of an aged French verb meaning to weave. The sort of the tumor is dependent upon the kind of growth it undergoes. These stem cells in the body are given so much importance on account of their promising part in the treatment of disorders later on.

The best we might do is find an estimate based on an normal individual. There is a vast scope of cells on the Earth that survive differently from one another and execute unique varieties of function. All living things are composed of cells.

Actually, the body wouldnt exist without enzymes because the chemical reactions necessary to keep the body simply wouldnt occur fast enough. What follows is a short overview of the majority of the significant organelles and other structures found in cells along with a brief description for each. Even inside the same organism, there are different kinds of cells.

The DNA of a cell holds all of the info a cell should keep itself alive. Cell signaling is required by multicellular organisms to coordinate a wide selection of functions. These cells play an important part in the initiation of immunological reactions.

The sort of substrate is another component that has an effect on the enzyme action. Organic molecules that function to help an enzyme are known as coenzymes. Based on the kind of the plants product that is to be used and the sort of the enzyme applied, the fermented product varies.

Xenomorphs are merely that cool. Make it more fun for the remainder of us. They can endure for many months within the recipient.

You have to follow along with the author guidelines to manually format your document or construct a LaTeX undertaking. In the library there are various books on various topics and subjects. The answer to each of these questions lies in genetics.

No new treatments utilizing the cells are shown to be medically powerful. As stated above, archaebacteria are an extremely old kind of prokaryotic cells. The material our entire body uses to develop new cells comes from the food that we eat.

Sometimes, in the event the infants blood has an antigen that the mothers blood doesnt, her immune system will observe the infants antigen as foreign and respond by attempting to eradicate it like it were a dangerous pathogen. They also do not have a nucleus. They comprise the majority of these cells.

Astrocytes, also called astroglia, are related to both neurons and other portions of the body. T cells (also referred to as T lymphocytes) are among the key elements of the adaptive immune system.

The endoskeletons of different animals might be more flexible for instance, the endoskeleton of a shark is constructed of cartilage, the identical material which makes up the soft portions of your nose. There are about 200 unique kinds of cells within the body. There are about 200 unique kinds of cells in your entire body.

For instance, they supply a whole image of a zebrafish embryo. The sperm doesnt have many organelles that are typically seen in the majority of cells.

For instance, collagen has a super-coiled helical form. Smooth muscle doesnt have sarcomeres. They cannot locate tissue as they are just examine the surface portion of the epidermis.

Cell walls may also be found surrounding some varieties of eukaryotic cells. Cells grow and divide as a consequence of signaling from different cells. Each cell has a certain function.

From time to time, though, this growth can get unregulated and result in a mass of cells. Theres regular movement of proteins using these compartments. To say that cells are normally small isnt saying much, however, because even among microscopic cells theres a broad range in proportion.

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Unbiased Report Exposes the Unanswered Questions on Different Types of Cells in Biology - Rising Sun Chatsworth

The 3D cell culture market is projected to reach USD 1,846 million by 2024 from USD 892 million in 2019, at a CAGR of 15.7% – PRNewswire

NEW YORK, Dec. 17, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- The global 3D cell culture market is projected to grow at a CAGR of 15.7% during the forecast period.

Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05206182/?utm_source=PRN

The 3D cell culture market is projected to reach USD 1,846 million by 2024 from USD 892 million in 2019, at a CAGR of 15.7%. The growth in this market is primarily driven by the increasing focus on developing alternatives to animal testing, growing focus on personalized medicine, increasing incidence of chronic diseases, and the availability of funding for research. On the other hand, the lack of infrastructure for 3D cell-based research and the high cost of cell biology research are expected to limit market growth during the forecast period.

The microfluidics-based 3D cell cultures segment is projected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period.Based on product, the 3D cell culture market is segmented into scaffold-based, scaffold-free, microfluidics-based, and magnetic & bioprinted 3D cell cultures.The microfluidics-based segment is expected to register the highest CAGR during the forecast period.

Funding initiatives from various government and private investors are among the key factors driving the growth of this market.

The cancer and stem cell research segment accounted for the largest share of the 3D cell culture market in 2018.On the basis of application, the 3D cell culture market is segmented into cancer & stem cell research, drug discovery & toxicology testing, and tissue engineering & regenerative medicine.The cancer & stem cell research segment accounted for the largest share of the market in 2018.

The increasing prevalence of cancer and significant funding initiatives for cancer research from the government as well as the private sector are some of the major factors driving the growth of this application segment.

Europe to witness high growth during the forecast period.Based on region, the 3D cell culture market is segmented into North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, and the Rest of the World (RoW). The European market is expected to grow at the highest CAGR owing to the growth of the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry, increasing incidence of cancer, growing number of venture capital investments, strategic expansion of market players in the region, recent commercialization of microfluidic-based products, increasing presence of major market players, and the large number of research activities in the region.

The primary interviews conducted for this report can be categorized as follows: By Company Type: Tier 1: 50%, Tier 2: 30%, and Tier 3: 20% By Designation: C-level: 37%, D-level: 29%, and Others: 34% By Region: North America: 38%, Europe: 23%, Asia: 30%, and the RoW: 9%

List of companies profiled in this report Thermo Fisher Scientific (US) Corning Incorporated (US) Merck (Germany) Lonza AG (Switzerland) REPROCELL Incorporated (Japan) TissUse (Germany) InSphero (Switzerland) Synthecon (US) 3D Biotek (US) CN Bio (UK) Hamilton Company (US) MIMETAS (Netherlands) Emulate (US) Hrel Corporation (US) QGel SA (Switzerland) SynVivo (US) Advanced BioMatrix (US) Greiner Bio-One International (Austria) PromoCell (Germany)

Research Coverage:The report provides an overview of the 3D cell culture market.It aims at estimating the market size and growth potential of this market across different segments such as product, application, end user, and region.

The report also includes an in-depth competitive analysis of the key players in the market, along with their company profiles, recent developments, and key market strategies.

Key Benefits of Buying the Report:The report will help the market leaders/new entrants in the 3D cell culture market by providing them with the closest approximations of revenues for the overall market and its subsegments.This report will help stakeholders to understand the competitive landscape better and gain insights to position their businesses and help companies adopt suitable go-to-market strategies.

The report also helps stakeholders understand the pulse of the market and provide them with information regarding key market drivers and opportunities.

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The 3D cell culture market is projected to reach USD 1,846 million by 2024 from USD 892 million in 2019, at a CAGR of 15.7% - PRNewswire