» Articles » PMID: 33928092

Pescoids and Chimeras to Probe Early Evo-Devo in the Fish

Overview
Specialty Cell Biology
Date 2021 Apr 30
PMID 33928092
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The fish species with its sighted and blind eco-morphotypes has become an original model to challenge vertebrate developmental evolution. Recently, we demonstrated that phenotypic evolution can be impacted by early developmental events starting from the production of oocytes in the fish ovaries. offers an amenable model to test the influence of maternal determinants on cell fate decisions during early development, yet the mechanisms by which the information contained in the eggs is translated into specific developmental programs remain obscure due to the lack of specific tools in this emergent model. Here we describe methods for the generation of pescoids from yolkless-blastoderm explants to test the influence of embryonic and extraembryonic tissues on cell fate decisions, as well as the production of chimeric embryos obtained by intermorph cell transplantations to probe cell autonomous or non-autonomous processes. We show that pescoids have the potential to recapitulate the main ontogenetic events observed in intact embryos, including the internalization of mesodermal progenitors and eye development, as followed with reporter lines. In addition, intermorph cell grafts resulted in proper integration of exogenous cells into the embryonic tissues, with lineages becoming more restricted from mid-blastula to gastrula. The implementation of these approaches in will bring new light on the cascades of events, from the maternal pre-patterning of the early embryo to the evolution of brain regionalization.

Citing Articles

3D spheroid culturing of Astyanax mexicanus liver-derived cell lines recapitulates distinct transcriptomic and metabolic states of in vivo tissue environment.

Biswas T, Rajendran N, Hassan H, Li H, Zhao C, Rohner N J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol. 2024; 342(3):301-312.

PMID: 38192038 PMC: 11060904. DOI: 10.1002/jez.b.23236.


The cavefish Astyanax mexicanus.

Rohner N Nat Methods. 2023; 20(7):948-950.

PMID: 37434002 DOI: 10.1038/s41592-023-01916-w.


Eye morphogenesis in the blind Mexican cavefish.

Devos L, Agnes F, Edouard J, Simon V, Legendre L, El Khallouki N Biol Open. 2021; 10(10).

PMID: 34590124 PMC: 8565469. DOI: 10.1242/bio.059031.


Studying evolution of the primary body axis in vivo and in vitro.

Anlas K, Trivedi V Elife. 2021; 10.

PMID: 34463611 PMC: 8456739. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.69066.

References
1.
Ivanovitch K, Cavodeassi F, Wilson S . Precocious acquisition of neuroepithelial character in the eye field underlies the onset of eye morphogenesis. Dev Cell. 2013; 27(3):293-305. PMC: 3898423. DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2013.09.023. View

2.
Yamamoto Y, Jeffery W . Central role for the lens in cave fish eye degeneration. Science. 2000; 289(5479):631-3. DOI: 10.1126/science.289.5479.631. View

3.
Alunni A, Menuet A, Candal E, Penigault J, Jeffery W, Retaux S . Developmental mechanisms for retinal degeneration in the blind cavefish Astyanax mexicanus. J Comp Neurol. 2007; 505(2):221-33. DOI: 10.1002/cne.21488. View

4.
Solnica-Krezel L . Maternal contributions to gastrulation in zebrafish. Curr Top Dev Biol. 2020; 140:391-427. DOI: 10.1016/bs.ctdb.2020.05.001. View

5.
Torres-Paz J, Hyacinthe C, Pierre C, Retaux S . Towards an integrated approach to understand Mexican cavefish evolution. Biol Lett. 2018; 14(8). PMC: 6127114. DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2018.0101. View