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result(s) for
"Zebrafish - genetics"
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Multiomic atlas with functional stratification and developmental dynamics of zebrafish cis-regulatory elements
2022
Zebrafish, a popular organism for studying embryonic development and for modeling human diseases, has so far lacked a systematic functional annotation program akin to those in other animal models. To address this, we formed the international DANIO-CODE consortium and created a central repository to store and process zebrafish developmental functional genomic data. Our data coordination center (
https://danio-code.zfin.org
) combines a total of 1,802 sets of unpublished and re-analyzed published genomic data, which we used to improve existing annotations and show its utility in experimental design. We identified over 140,000
cis
-regulatory elements throughout development, including classes with distinct features dependent on their activity in time and space. We delineated the distinct distance topology and chromatin features between regulatory elements active during zygotic genome activation and those active during organogenesis. Finally, we matched regulatory elements and epigenomic landscapes between zebrafish and mouse and predicted functional relationships between them beyond sequence similarity, thus extending the utility of zebrafish developmental genomics to mammals.
The DANIO-CODE consortium leverages a large-scale multiomic dataset to improve zebrafish genome annotation. They identify ~140,000
cis
-regulatory elements throughout development and perform a comparison with the mouse regulatory landscape.
Journal Article
Transcription bodies regulate gene expression by sequestering CDK9
2024
The localization of transcriptional activity in specialized transcription bodies is a hallmark of gene expression in eukaryotic cells. It remains unclear, however, if and how transcription bodies affect gene expression. Here we disrupted the formation of two prominent endogenous transcription bodies that mark the onset of zygotic transcription in zebrafish embryos and analysed the effect on gene expression using enriched SLAM-seq and live-cell imaging. We find that the disruption of transcription bodies results in the misregulation of hundreds of genes. Here we focus on genes that are upregulated. These genes have accessible chromatin and are poised to be transcribed in the presence of the two transcription bodies, but they do not go into elongation. Live-cell imaging shows that disruption of the two large transcription bodies enables these poised genes to be transcribed in ectopic transcription bodies, suggesting that the large transcription bodies sequester a pause release factor. Supporting this hypothesis, we find that CDK9—the kinase that releases paused polymerase II—is highly enriched in the two large transcription bodies. Overexpression of CDK9 in wild-type embryos results in the formation of ectopic transcription bodies and thus phenocopies the removal of the two large transcription bodies. Taken together, our results show that transcription bodies regulate transcription by sequestering machinery, thereby preventing genes elsewhere in the nucleus from being transcribed.
Ugolini et al. show that transcription bodies regulate gene expression during zygotic genome activation in zebrafish development by sequestering CDK9 to limit the transcription of genes away from transcription bodies.
Journal Article
Oscillatory DeltaC Expression in Neural Progenitors Primes the Prototype of Forebrain Development
by
Hou, Pei-Shan
,
Wu, Pei-Rong
,
Nian, Fang-Shin
in
Animals
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2025
Notch signaling plays a pivotal role in regulating various developmental processes, particularly in controlling the timing of neuronal production within the developing neocortex. Central to this regulatory mechanism is the oscillatory pattern of Delta, which functions as a developmental clock modulator. Its deficiency profoundly impairs mammalian brain formation, highlighting its fundamental role in brain development. However, zebrafish carrying a mutation in the functional ortholog DeltaC (dlc) within their functional ortholog exhibit an intact forebrain structure, implying evolutionary variations in Notch signaling within the forebrain. In this study, we unveil the distinct yet analogous expression profiles of
Delta
and
Her
genes in the developing vertebrate forebrain. Specifically, for the first time, we detected the oscillatory expression of the
Delta
gene
dlc
in the developing zebrafish forebrain. Although this oscillatory pattern appeared irregular and was not pervasive among the progenitor population, attenuation of the dlc-involved Notch pathway using a γ-secretase inhibitor impaired neuronal differentiation in the developing zebrafish forebrain, revealing the indispensable role of the dlc-involved Notch pathway in regulating early zebrafish neurogenesis. Taken together, our results demonstrate the foundational prototype of dlc-involved Notch signaling in the developing zebrafish forebrains, upon which the intricate patterns of the mammalian neocortex may have been sculpted.
Journal Article
The cytoskeleton adaptor protein Sorbs1 controls the development of lymphatic and venous vessels in zebrafish
by
Bleuart, Anouk
,
Martin, Maud
,
Dequiedt, Franck
in
Adapters
,
Adaptor proteins
,
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing
2024
Background
Lymphangiogenesis, the formation of lymphatic vessels, is tightly linked to the development of the venous vasculature, both at the cellular and molecular levels. Here, we identify a novel role for Sorbs1, the founding member of the SoHo family of cytoskeleton adaptor proteins, in vascular and lymphatic development in the zebrafish.
Results
We show that Sorbs1 is required for secondary sprouting and emergence of several vascular structures specifically derived from the axial vein. Most notably, formation of the precursor parachordal lymphatic structures is affected in
sorbs1
mutant embryos, severely impacting the establishment of the trunk lymphatic vessel network. Interestingly, we show that Sorbs1 interacts with the BMP pathway and could function outside of Vegfc signaling. Mechanistically, Sorbs1 controls FAK/Src signaling and subsequently impacts on the cytoskeleton processes regulated by Rac1 and RhoA GTPases. Inactivation of Sorbs1 altered cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) contacts rearrangement and cytoskeleton dynamics, leading to specific defects in endothelial cell migratory and adhesive properties.
Conclusions
Overall, using in vitro and in vivo assays, we identify Sorbs1 as an important regulator of venous and lymphatic angiogenesis independently of the Vegfc signaling axis. These results provide a better understanding of the complexity found within context-specific vascular and lymphatic development.
Journal Article
Genetic compensation induced by deleterious mutations but not gene knockdowns
2015
Zebrafish embryos injected with
egfl7
morpholino exhibit severe vascular defects but
egfl7
mutants do not show any obvious phenotypes, illustrating the power of comparing mutants and morphants to identify modifier genes.
Mutant versus morphant phenotypes
Antisense approaches to gene knockdown or interference, using agents such as siRNA and morpholino oligomers, have been criticized as being prone to off-target effects that can lead to phenotypes unrelated to the silencing of the target gene. Didier Stainer and colleagues contribute to this debate with a report that may cast doubt on the superiority of genetic inactivation versus knockdown. They show that 'morphant' zebrafish embryos in which the
egfl7
gene is silenced using morpholinos, display severe vascular defects, whereas
egfl7
mutant fish show very mild phenotypes. The discrepancy is a result of genetic compensation induced by deleterious mutations (upregulation of Emilins to counter the loss of Egfl7), but not by transcriptional or translational knockdown. This work illustrates the power of comparing mutants and morphants to identify modifier genes.
Cells sense their environment and adapt to it by fine-tuning their transcriptome. Wired into this network of gene expression control are mechanisms to compensate for gene dosage. The increasing use of reverse genetics in zebrafish, and other model systems, has revealed profound differences between the phenotypes caused by genetic mutations and those caused by gene knockdowns at many loci
1
,
2
,
3
, an observation previously reported in mouse and
Arabidopsis
4
,
5
,
6
,
7
. To identify the reasons underlying the phenotypic differences between mutants and knockdowns, we generated mutations in zebrafish
egfl7
, an endothelial extracellular matrix gene of therapeutic interest, as well as in
vegfaa
. Here we show that
egfl7
mutants do not show any obvious phenotypes while animals injected with
egfl7
morpholino (morphants) exhibit severe vascular defects. We further observe that
egfl7
mutants are less sensitive than their wild-type siblings to Egfl7 knockdown, arguing against residual protein function in the mutants or significant off-target effects of the morpholinos when used at a moderate dose. Comparing
egfl7
mutant and morphant proteomes and transcriptomes, we identify a set of proteins and genes that are upregulated in mutants but not in morphants. Among them are extracellular matrix genes that can rescue
egfl7
morphants, indicating that they could be compensating for the loss of Egfl7 function in the phenotypically wild-type
egfl7
mutants. Moreover,
egfl7
CRISPR interference, which obstructs transcript elongation and causes severe vascular defects, does not cause the upregulation of these genes. Similarly,
vegfaa
mutants but not morphants show an upregulation of
vegfab
. Taken together, these data reveal the activation of a compensatory network to buffer against deleterious mutations, which was not observed after translational or transcriptional knockdown.
Journal Article
Transcriptome-wide association study of schizophrenia and chromatin activity yields mechanistic disease insights
2018
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified over 100 risk loci for schizophrenia, but the causal mechanisms remain largely unknown. We performed a transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS) integrating a schizophrenia GWAS of 79,845 individuals from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium with expression data from brain, blood, and adipose tissues across 3,693 primarily control individuals. We identified 157 TWAS-significant genes, of which 35 did not overlap a known GWAS locus. Of these 157 genes, 42 were associated with specific chromatin features measured in independent samples, thus highlighting potential regulatory targets for follow-up. Suppression of one identified susceptibility gene,
mapk3
, in zebrafish showed a significant effect on neurodevelopmental phenotypes. Expression and splicing from the brain captured most of the TWAS effect across all genes. This large-scale connection of associations to target genes, tissues, and regulatory features is an essential step in moving toward a mechanistic understanding of GWAS.
A transcriptome-wide association study integrating genome-wide association data with expression data from brain, blood and adipose tissues identifies new candidate susceptibility genes for schizophrenia, providing a step toward understanding the underlying biology.
Journal Article
Single-cell reconstruction of developmental trajectories during zebrafish embryogenesis
2018
As embryos develop, numerous cell types with distinct functions and morphologies arise from pluripotent cells. Three research groups have used single-cell RNA sequencing to analyze the transcriptional changes accompanying development of vertebrate embryos (see the Perspective by Harland). Wagner et al. sequenced the transcriptomes of more than 90,000 cells throughout zebrafish development to reveal how cells differentiate during axis patterning, germ layer formation, and early organogenesis. Farrell et al. profiled the transcriptomes of tens of thousands of embryonic cells and applied a computational approach to construct a branching tree describing the transcriptional trajectories that lead to 25 distinct zebrafish cell types. The branching tree revealed how cells change their gene expression as they become more and more specialized. Briggs et al. examined whole frog embryos, spanning zygotic genome activation through early organogenesis, to map cell states and differentiation across all cell lineages over time. These data and approaches pave the way for the comprehensive reconstruction of transcriptional trajectories during development. Science , this issue p. 981 , p. eaar3131 , p. eaar5780 ; see also p. 967 Single-cell RNA sequencing and a computational technique reveal cell trajectories that form the complex body plan of the zebrafish embryo. During embryogenesis, cells acquire distinct fates by transitioning through transcriptional states. To uncover these transcriptional trajectories during zebrafish embryogenesis, we sequenced 38,731 cells and developed URD, a simulated diffusion-based computational reconstruction method. URD identified the trajectories of 25 cell types through early somitogenesis, gene expression along them, and their spatial origin in the blastula. Analysis of Nodal signaling mutants revealed that their transcriptomes were canalized into a subset of wild-type transcriptional trajectories. Some wild-type developmental branch points contained cells that express genes characteristic of multiple fates. These cells appeared to trans-specify from one fate to another. These findings reconstruct the transcriptional trajectories of a vertebrate embryo, highlight the concurrent canalization and plasticity of embryonic specification, and provide a framework with which to reconstruct complex developmental trees from single-cell transcriptomes.
Journal Article
Toddler: An Embryonic Signal That Promotes Cell Movement via Apelin Receptors
by
Valen, Eivind
,
Joung, J. Keith
,
Mitchell, Andrew
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Animals
,
Apelin Receptors
2014
It has been assumed that most, if not all, signals regulating early development have been identified. Contrary to this expectation, we identified 28 candidate signaling proteins expressed during zebrafish embryogenesis, including Toddler, a short, conserved, and secreted peptide. Both absence and overproduction of Toddler reduce the movement of mesendodermal cells during zebrafish gastrulation. Local and ubiquitous production of Toddler promote cell movement, suggesting that Toddler is neither an attractant nor a repellent but acts globally as a motogen. Toddler drives internalization of G protein–coupled APJ/Apelin receptors, and activation of APJ/Apelin signaling rescues toddler mutants. These results indicate that Toddler is an activator of APJ/Apelin receptor signaling, promotes gastrulation movements, and might be the first in a series of uncharacterized developmental signals. A conserved signal is identified that activates G protein–coupled receptors to promote zebrafish gastrulation. It has been assumed that most, if not all, major signals that control vertebrate embryogenesis have been identified. Using genomics, Pauli et al. ( 10.1126/science.1248636 , published online 9 January) have now identified several new candidate signals expressed during early zebrafish development. One of these signals, Toddler, is a short, conserved, and secreted peptide that promotes the movement of cells during zebrafish gastrulation. Toddler signals through G protein–coupled receptors to drive internalization of the Apelin receptor, and activation of Apelin signaling can rescue toddler mutants.
Journal Article
Sequential, Divergent, and Cooperative Requirements of Foxl2a and Foxl2b in Ovary Development and Maintenance of Zebrafish
2017
Foxl2 is essential for mammalian ovary maintenance. Although sexually dimorphic expression of foxl2 was observed in many teleosts, its role and regulative mechanism in fish remained largely unclear. In this study, we first identified two transcript variants of foxl2a and its homologous gene foxl2b in zebrafish, and revealed their specific expression in follicular layer cells in a sequential and divergent fashion during ovary differentiation, maturation, and maintenance. Then, homozygous foxl2a mutants (foxl2a−/−) and foxl2b mutants (foxl2b−/−) were constructed and detailed comparisons, such as sex ratio, gonadal histological structure, transcriptome profiling, and dynamic expression of gonadal development-related genes, were carried out. Initial ovarian differentiation and oocyte development occur normally both in foxl2a−/− and foxl2b−/− mutants, but foxl2a and foxl2b disruptions result in premature ovarian failure and partial sex reversal, respectively, in adult females. In foxl2a−/− female mutants, sox9a-amh/cyp19a1a signaling was upregulated at 150 days postfertilization (dpf) and subsequently oocyte apoptosis was triggered after 180 dpf. In contrast, dmrt1 expression was greater at 105 dpf and increased several 100-fold in foxl2b−/− mutated ovaries at 270 dpf, along with other testis-related genes. Finally, homozygous foxl2a−/−/foxl2b−/− double mutants were constructed in which complete sex reversal occurs early and testis-differentiation genes robustly increase at 60 dpf. Given mutual compensation between foxl2a and foxl2b in foxl2b−/− and foxl2a−/− mutants, we proposed a model in which foxl2a and foxl2b cooperate to regulate zebrafish ovary development and maintenance, with foxl2b potentially having a dominant role in preventing the ovary from differentiating as testis, as compared to foxl2a.
Journal Article
Modulation of tissue repair by regeneration enhancer elements
by
Hu, Jianxin
,
Gemberling, Matthew
,
Black, Brian L.
in
631/136/532/489
,
631/532/489
,
Acetylation
2016
How tissue regeneration programs are triggered by injury has received limited research attention. Here we investigate the existence of enhancer regulatory elements that are activated in regenerating tissue. Transcriptomic analyses reveal that
leptin b
(
lepb
) is highly induced in regenerating hearts and fins of zebrafish. Epigenetic profiling identified a short DNA sequence element upstream and distal to
lepb
that acquires open chromatin marks during regeneration and enables injury-dependent expression from minimal promoters. This element could activate expression in injured neonatal mouse tissues and was divisible into tissue-specific modules sufficient for expression in regenerating zebrafish fins or hearts. Simple enhancer-effector transgenes employing
lepb
-linked sequences upstream of pro- or anti-regenerative factors controlled the efficacy of regeneration in zebrafish. Our findings provide evidence for ‘tissue regeneration enhancer elements’ (TREEs) that trigger gene expression in injury sites and can be engineered to modulate the regenerative potential of vertebrate organs.
An injury-dependent enhancer element is identified that activates gene expression in regenerating zebrafish tissues and can be engineered into DNA constructs that increase tissue regenerative capacity; the element is also active in injured mouse tissue.
Identification of a tissue regeneration enhancer
Ken Poss and colleagues identify an injury-dependent enhancer element that activates gene expression in regenerating zebrafish tissues. They find that the element, which they term a 'tissue regeneration enhancer element' (TREE), is divisible into tissue-specific modules that can each direct expression in zebrafish hearts or fins. The identified element can be used to direct the expression of pro- or anti-regenerative factors in zebrafish tissues and thus control the efficiency of regeneration. Finally, by engineering TREEs upstream of mitogenic factor genes, the authors demonstrate their ability to boost tissue repair in injured mouse tissue.
Journal Article