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<PubmedArticle><MedlineCitation Status="MEDLINE" Owner="NLM" IndexingMethod="Manual"><PMID Version="1">19940849</PMID><DateCompleted><Year>2010</Year><Month>01</Month><Day>26</Day></DateCompleted><DateRevised><Year>2023</Year><Month>01</Month><Day>20</Day></DateRevised><Article PubModel="Print"><Journal><ISSN IssnType="Electronic">1476-4687</ISSN><JournalIssue CitedMedium="Internet"><Volume>462</Volume><Issue>7274</Issue><PubDate><Year>2009</Year><Month>Dec</Month><Day>10</Day></PubDate></JournalIssue><Title>Nature</Title><ISOAbbreviation>Nature</ISOAbbreviation></Journal><ArticleTitle>Chiral blastomere arrangement dictates zygotic left-right asymmetry pathway in snails.</ArticleTitle><Pagination><StartPage>790</StartPage><EndPage>794</EndPage><MedlinePgn>790-4</MedlinePgn></Pagination><ELocationID EIdType="doi" ValidYN="Y">10.1038/nature08597</ELocationID><Abstract><AbstractText>Most animals display internal and/or external left-right asymmetry. Several mechanisms for left-right asymmetry determination have been proposed for vertebrates and invertebrates but they are still not well characterized, particularly at the early developmental stage. The gastropods Lymnaea stagnalis and the closely related Lymnaea peregra have both the sinistral (recessive) and the dextral (dominant) snails within a species and the chirality is hereditary, determined by a single locus that functions maternally. Intriguingly, the handedness-determining gene(s) and the mechanisms are not yet identified. Here we show that in L. stagnalis, the chiral blastomere arrangement at the eight-cell stage (but not the two- or four-cell stage) determines the left-right asymmetry throughout the developmental programme, and acts upstream of the Nodal signalling pathway. Thus, we could demonstrate that mechanical micromanipulation of the third cleavage chirality (from the four- to the eight-cell stage) leads to reversal of embryonic handedness. These manipulated embryos grew to 'dextralized' sinistral and 'sinistralized' dextral snails-that is, normal healthy fertile organisms with all the usual left-right asymmetries reversed to that encoded by the mothers' genetic information. Moreover, manipulation reversed the embryonic nodal expression patterns. Using backcrossed F(7) congenic animals, we could demonstrate a strong genetic linkage between the handedness-determining gene(s) and the chiral cytoskeletal dynamics at the third cleavage that promotes the dominant-type blastomere arrangement. These results establish the crucial importance of the maternally determined blastomere arrangement at the eight-cell stage in dictating zygotic signalling pathways in the organismal chiromorphogenesis. Similar chiral blastomere configuration mechanisms may also operate upstream of the Nodal pathway in left-right patterning of deuterostomes/vertebrates.</AbstractText></Abstract><AuthorList CompleteYN="Y"><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>Kuroda</LastName><ForeName>Reiko</ForeName><Initials>R</Initials><AffiliationInfo><Affiliation>Department of Life Sciences, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Komaba, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8902, Japan. ckuroda@mail.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp</Affiliation></AffiliationInfo></Author><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>Endo</LastName><ForeName>Bunshiro</ForeName><Initials>B</Initials></Author><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>Abe</LastName><ForeName>Masanori</ForeName><Initials>M</Initials></Author><Author ValidYN="Y"><LastName>Shimizu</LastName><ForeName>Miho</ForeName><Initials>M</Initials></Author></AuthorList><Language>eng</Language><DataBankList CompleteYN="Y"><DataBank><DataBankName>GENBANK</DataBankName><AccessionNumberList><AccessionNumber>GU073383</AccessionNumber><AccessionNumber>GU073384</AccessionNumber></AccessionNumberList></DataBank></DataBankList><PublicationTypeList><PublicationType UI="D016428">Journal Article</PublicationType></PublicationTypeList></Article><MedlineJournalInfo><Country>England</Country><MedlineTA>Nature</MedlineTA><NlmUniqueID>0410462</NlmUniqueID><ISSNLinking>0028-0836</ISSNLinking></MedlineJournalInfo><ChemicalList><Chemical><RegistryNumber>0</RegistryNumber><NameOfSubstance UI="D055457">Nodal Protein</NameOfSubstance></Chemical><Chemical><RegistryNumber>0</RegistryNumber><NameOfSubstance UI="D014157">Transcription Factors</NameOfSubstance></Chemical></ChemicalList><CitationSubset>IM</CitationSubset><CommentsCorrectionsList><CommentsCorrections RefType="CommentIn"><RefSource>Nature. 2009 Dec 10;462(7274):727-8. doi: 10.1038/462727a.</RefSource><PMID Version="1">20010672</PMID></CommentsCorrections></CommentsCorrectionsList><MeshHeadingList><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D000818" MajorTopicYN="N">Animals</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D020296" MajorTopicYN="N">Animals, Congenic</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D001757" MajorTopicYN="N">Blastomeres</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000166" MajorTopicYN="Y">cytology</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000502" MajorTopicYN="N">physiology</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D019521" MajorTopicYN="N">Body Patterning</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000235" MajorTopicYN="N">genetics</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000502" MajorTopicYN="Y">physiology</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D004625" MajorTopicYN="N">Embryo, Nonmammalian</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000166" MajorTopicYN="N">cytology</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000196" MajorTopicYN="Y">embryology</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000378" MajorTopicYN="N">metabolism</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D008195" MajorTopicYN="N">Lymnaea</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000033" MajorTopicYN="N">anatomy &amp; histology</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000166" MajorTopicYN="N">cytology</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000196" MajorTopicYN="Y">embryology</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000235" MajorTopicYN="N">genetics</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D008969" MajorTopicYN="N">Molecular Sequence Data</DescriptorName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D055457" MajorTopicYN="N">Nodal Protein</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000235" MajorTopicYN="N">genetics</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000378" MajorTopicYN="N">metabolism</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D012857" MajorTopicYN="N">Situs Inversus</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000196" MajorTopicYN="N">embryology</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000473" MajorTopicYN="N">pathology</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D014157" MajorTopicYN="N">Transcription Factors</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000235" MajorTopicYN="N">genetics</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000378" MajorTopicYN="N">metabolism</QualifierName></MeshHeading><MeshHeading><DescriptorName UI="D015053" MajorTopicYN="N">Zygote</DescriptorName><QualifierName UI="Q000166" MajorTopicYN="Y">cytology</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000254" MajorTopicYN="Y">growth &amp; development</QualifierName><QualifierName UI="Q000378" MajorTopicYN="N">metabolism</QualifierName></MeshHeading></MeshHeadingList></MedlineCitation><PubmedData><History><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="received"><Year>2009</Year><Month>7</Month><Day>29</Day></PubMedPubDate><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="accepted"><Year>2009</Year><Month>10</Month><Day>22</Day></PubMedPubDate><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="entrez"><Year>2009</Year><Month>11</Month><Day>27</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="pubmed"><Year>2009</Year><Month>11</Month><Day>27</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate><PubMedPubDate PubStatus="medline"><Year>2010</Year><Month>1</Month><Day>27</Day><Hour>6</Hour><Minute>0</Minute></PubMedPubDate></History><PublicationStatus>ppublish</PublicationStatus><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">19940849</ArticleId><ArticleId IdType="doi">10.1038/nature08597</ArticleId><ArticleId IdType="pii">nature08597</ArticleId></ArticleIdList><ReferenceList><Reference><Citation>PLoS Biol. 2005 Aug;3(8):e268</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">16035921</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Nature. 2006 Apr 6;440(7085):803-7</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">16598259</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Nature. 2006 Apr 6;440(7085):798-802</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">16598258</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Dev Genes Evol. 2003 May;213(4):193-8</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">12690455</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Semin Cell Dev Biol. 2009 Jun;20(4):456-63</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">19084609</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Nature. 2009 Feb 19;457(7232):1007-11</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">19098895</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Curr Opin Genet Dev. 2007 Aug;17(4):351-8</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">17643981</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Bioessays. 2007 Mar;29(3):271-87</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">17295291</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Cell. 2005 May 20;121(4):633-644</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">15907475</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Development. 2003 Dec;130(23):5731-40</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">14534142</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Cell. 2002 Oct 4;111(1):77-89</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">12372302</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Gene. 2002 Apr 3;287(1-2):107-13</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">11992728</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Development. 1990 May;109(1):1-9</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">2209459</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Nature. 2002 Jul 4;418(6893):96-9</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">12097914</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Nature. 1991 Feb 7;349(6309):536-8</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">1992354</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Science. 1923 Oct 5;58(1501):269-70</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">17837785</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Curr Biol. 2004 Aug 24;14(16):1462-7</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">15324662</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Cell. 2006 Apr 7;125(1):33-45</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">16615888</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol. 2008 Jan 15;310(1):41-53</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">16838294</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Development. 2006 Jun;133(11):2095-104</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">16672339</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Dev Biol. 2002 Jun 15;246(2):341-55</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">12051820</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference><Reference><Citation>Curr Biol. 2004 Aug 24;14(16):R654-6</Citation><ArticleIdList><ArticleId IdType="pubmed">15324681</ArticleId></ArticleIdList></Reference></ReferenceList></PubmedData></PubmedArticle></PubmedArticleSet>