posted on 2014-04-15, 00:00authored byMaria Lobikin, Gang Wang, Jing-Song Xu, Yi-Wen Hsieh, Chiou-Fen Chuang, Joan M. Lemire, Michael Levin
Many types of embryos’ bodyplans exhibit consistently-oriented laterality of the heart, viscera,
and brain. Errors of left-right patterning present an important class of human birth defects, and
considerable controversy exists about the nature and evolutionary conservation of the molecular
mechanisms that allow embryos to reliably orient the left-right axis. Here we show that the same
mutations in the cytoskeletal protein tubulin that alter asymmetry in plants also affect very early steps
of left-right patterning in nematode and frog embryos, as well as chirality of human cells in culture. In
the frog embryo, tubulin α and tubulin γ-associated protein are required for the differential distribution
of maternal proteins to the left or right blastomere at the first cell division. Our data reveal a remarkable
molecular conservation of mechanisms initiating left-right asymmetry. The origin of laterality is
cytoplasmic, ancient, and highly conserved across kingdoms – a fundamental feature of the cytoskeleton
that underlies chirality in cells and multicellular organisms.
Funding
ML gratefully acknowledges funding support from the NIH (R01-GM077425) and
the American Heart Association (Established Investigator Grant 0740088N). Y.-W.H. was supported by a
NIH Training Grant of Organogenesis; C.-F.C was supported by a Whitehall Foundation Research Award
and an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship