Abstract
The group Spiralia includes species with one of the most significant cases of left–right asymmetries in animals: the coiling of the shell of gastropod molluscs (snails). In this animal group, an early event of embryonic chirality controlled by cytoskeleton dynamics and the subsequent differential activation of the genes
nodal
and
Pitx
determine the left–right axis of snails, and thus the direction of coiling of the shell. Despite progressive advances in our understanding of left–right axis specification in molluscs, little is known about left–right development in other spiralian taxa. Here, we identify and characterize the expression of
nodal
and
Pitx
orthologues in three different spiralian animals—the brachiopod
Novocrania anomala
, the annelid
Owenia fusiformis
and the nemertean
Lineus ruber
—and demonstrate embryonic chirality in the biradial-cleaving spiralian embryo of the bryozoan
Membranipora membranacea
. We show asymmetric expression of
nodal
and
Pitx
in the brachiopod and annelid, respectively, and symmetric expression of
Pitx
in the nemertean. Our findings indicate that early embryonic chirality is widespread and independent of the cleavage programme in the Spiralia. Additionally, our study illuminates the evolution of
nodal
and
Pitx
signalling by demonstrating embryonic asymmetric expression in lineages without obvious adult left–right asymmetries.
This article is part of the themed issue ‘Provocative questions in left–right asymmetry’.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology