Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 214, Issue 2, 15 October 1999, Pages 288-297
Developmental Biology

Regular Article
Spatially Regulated Translation in Embryos: Asymmetric Expression of Maternal Wnt-11 along the Dorsal–Ventral Axis in Xenopus

https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.1999.9426Get rights and content
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Abstract

Transition from symmetry to asymmetry is a central theme in cell and developmental biology. In Xenopus embryos, dorsal–ventral asymmetry is initiated by a microtubule-dependent cytoplasmic rotation during the first cell cycle after fertilization. Here we show that the cytoplasmic rotation initiates differential cytoplasmic polyadenylation of maternal Xwnt-11 RNA, encoding a member of the Wnt family of cell–cell signaling factors. Translational regulation of Xwnt-11 mRNA along the dorsal–ventral axis results in asymmetric accumulation of Xwnt-11 protein. These results demonstrate spatially regulated translation of a maternal cell-signaling factor along the vertebrate dorsal–ventral axis and represent a novel mechanism for Wnt gene regulation. Spatial regulation of maternal RNA translation, which has been established in invertebrates, appears to be an evolutionarily conserved mechanism in the generation of intracellular asymmetry and the consequential formation of the multicellular body pattern.

Keywords

Xenopus
axis formation
Wnt-11
polyadenylation
translation

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1

To whom correspondence should be addressed at the Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah, 2000 Circle of Hope, Room 452, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-5550. Fax: (801) 585-9099. E-mail: [email protected].