Litcius/Paper detail

Single-cell morphometrics reveals ancestral principles of notochord development

Toby G. R. Andrews, Wolfram Pönisch, Ewa K. Paluch, Benjamin Steventon, Èlia Benito‐Gutiérrez

2021Development41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Embryonic tissues are shaped by the dynamic behaviours of their constituent cells. To understand such cell behaviours and how they evolved, new approaches are needed to map out morphogenesis across different organisms. Here, we apply a quantitative approach to learn how the notochord forms during the development of amphioxus: a basally branching chordate. Using a single-cell morphometrics pipeline, we quantify the geometries of thousands of amphioxus notochord cells, and project them into a common mathematical space, termed morphospace. In morphospace, notochord cells disperse into branching trajectories of cell shape change, revealing a dynamic interplay between cell shape change and growth that collectively contributes to tissue elongation. By spatially mapping these trajectories, we identify conspicuous regional variation, both in developmental timing and trajectory topology. Finally, we show experimentally that, unlike ascidians but like vertebrates, posterior cell division is required in amphioxus to generate full notochord length, thereby suggesting this might be an ancestral chordate trait that is secondarily lost in ascidians. Altogether, our novel approach reveals that an unexpectedly complex scheme of notochord morphogenesis might have been present in the first chordates. This article has an associated 'The people behind the papers' interview.

Topics & Concepts

NotochordChordateBiologyMorphometricsMorphogenesisBody planEvolutionary biologyEvolutionary developmental biologyVertebrateEmbryogenesisCell biologyEcologyGeneticsEmbryoGeneDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationMarine Ecology and Invasive SpeciesHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZ