A conserved regulatory program drives emergence of the lateral plate mesoderm
By
Karin D. Prummel,
Christopher Hess,
Susan Nieuwenhuize,
Hugo J. Parker,
Katherine W. Rogers,
Iryna Kozmikova,
Claudia Racioppi,
Eline C. Brombacher,
Anna Czarkwiani,
Dunja Knapp,
Alexa Burger,
Elena Chiavacci,
Gopi Shah,
Alexa Burger,
Jan Huisken,
Maximina H. Yun,
Zbyněk Kozmík,
Lionel Christiaen,
Patrick Müller,
Marianne E. Bronner,
Robb Krumlauf,
Christian Mosimann
Posted 07 Feb 2018
bioRxiv DOI: 10.1101/261115
Cardiovascular lineages develop together with kidney, smooth muscle, and limb connective tissue progenitors from the lateral plate mesoderm (LPM). How the LPM initially emerges and how its downstream fates are molecularly interconnected remain unknown. Here, we isolated a pan-LPM enhancer in the zebrafish draculin ( drl ) gene that provides specific LPM reporter activity from early gastrulation. In toto live imaging and lineage tracing of drl -based reporters captured the dynamic LPM emergence as lineage-restricted mesendoderm field. The drl pan-LPM enhancer responds to the transcription factors EomesoderminA, FoxH1, and MixL1 that combined with Smad activity drive LPM emergence. We uncovered specific drl reporter activity in LPM-corresponding territories of several chordates including chicken, axolotl, lamprey, Ciona , and amphioxus, revealing a universal upstream LPM program. Altogether, our work provides a mechanistic framework for LPM emergence as defined progenitor field, possibly representing an ancient mesodermal cell state that predates the primordial vertebrate embryo.
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