Maternal Wnt11b regulates cortical rotation during Xenopus axis formation: analysis of maternal-effect wnt11b mutants

Author:

Houston Douglas W.1ORCID,Elliott Karen L.1,Coppenrath Kelsey2,Wlizla Marcin2ORCID,Horb Marko E.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Iowa 1 Department of Biology , , 257 BB, Iowa City, IA 52242-1324 , USA

2. National Xenopus Resource and Eugene Bell Center for Regenerative Biology and Tissue Engineering 2 , Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Asymmetric signalling centres in the early embryo are essential for axis formation in vertebrates. These regions (e.g. amphibian dorsal morula, mammalian anterior visceral endoderm) require stabilised nuclear β-catenin, but the role of localised Wnt ligand signalling activity in their establishment remains unclear. In Xenopus, dorsal β-catenin is initiated by vegetal microtubule-mediated symmetry breaking in the fertilised egg, known as ‘cortical rotation’. Localised wnt11b mRNA and ligand-independent activators of β-catenin have been implicated in dorsal β-catenin activation, but the extent to which each contributes to axis formation in this paradigm remains unclear. Here, we describe a CRISPR-mediated maternal-effect mutation in Xenopus laevis wnt11b.L. We find that wnt11b is maternally required for robust dorsal axis formation and for timely gastrulation, and zygotically for left-right asymmetry. Importantly, we show that vegetal microtubule assembly and cortical rotation are reduced in wnt11b mutant eggs. In addition, we show that activated Wnt coreceptor Lrp6 and Dishevelled lack behaviour consistent with roles in early β-catenin stabilisation, and that neither is regulated by Wnt11b. This work thus implicates Wnt11b in the distribution of putative dorsal determinants rather than in comprising the determinants themselves. This article has an associated ‘The people behind the papers’ interview.

Funder

University of Iowa

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

Reference96 articles.

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