Search results for "Platynereis"

showing 8 items of 8 documents

Long-lasting exocytosis and massive structural reorganisation in the egg periphery during cortical reaction inPlatynereis dumerilii(Annelida, Polycha…

1995

SummaryThe course of the cortical reaction in thePlatynereis dumeriliiegg is described from live observation and from sectioned fixed material and is found to differ in several aspects from the course of cortical reactions in better-known systems. Cortical granules are unusually numerous. They are discharged by exocytosis during a period of about 25 min following fertilisation (18°C). Most of the surplus membrane material brought to the egg surface by exocytosis is set free into the perivitelline space. Swelling of egg jelly precursor secreted by cortical granule exocytosis may be causal for the detachment of the vitelline envelope from the egg cell surface which, however, remains attached …

Egg cellCytochalasin DVitelline membranePerivitelline spaceExocytosismedicineAnimalsCytoskeletonCell SizeOvumMicrovillibiologyChemistryCortical granule exocytosisNocodazoleCell MembranePolychaetaCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationOocyteCell biologyMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureMicroscopy FluorescenceFertilizationCortical reactionEgg jellyDevelopmental BiologyPlatynereisZygote
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Phylogenomic analyses unravel annelid evolution

2011

Annelida, the ringed worms, is a highly diverse animal phylum that includes more than 15,000 described species and constitutes the dominant benthic macrofauna from the intertidal zone down to the deep sea. A robust annelid phylogeny would shape our understanding of animal body-plan evolution and shed light on the bilaterian ground pattern. Traditionally, Annelida has been split into two major groups: Clitellata (earthworms and leeches) and polychaetes (bristle worms), but recent evidence suggests that other taxa that were once considered to be separate phyla (Sipuncula, Echiura and Siboglinidae (also known as Pogonophora)) should be included in Annelida(1-4). However, the deep-level evoluti…

Expressed Sequence TagsSipunculaEchiuraGenomeMultidisciplinaryAnnelidbiologySiboglinidaeEcologyPhylumAnnelidaClitellataGenomicsbiology.organism_classificationModels BiologicalEvolutionary biologyAnimalsErrantiaInstitut für Biochemie und BiologiePhylogenyPlatynereisNature
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The polychaete Platynereis dumerilii (Annelida): a laboratory animal with spiralian cleavage, lifelong segment proliferation and a mixed benthic/pela…

2004

Platynereis dumerilii, a marine polychaetous annelid with indirect development, can be continuously bred in the laboratory. Here, we describe its spectacular reproduction and development and address a number of open research problems. Oogenesis is easily studied because the oocytes grow while floating in the coelom. Unlike the embryos of other model spiralians, the Platynereis embryo is transparent giving insight into the dynamic structures and processes inside the cells that accompany the prevailing anisotropic cleavages. Functional studies on cell specification and differential gene expression in embryos, larvae, and later stages are underway. Lifelong proliferation of uniform trunk segme…

MalePolychaeteLife Cycle Stagesanimal structuresAnnelidbiologyEcologyEmbryoPelagic zonePolychaetaCleavage (embryo)biology.organism_classificationGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolutionary biologyBenthic zoneAnimals LaboratoryLarvaOocytesCoelomAnimalsFemalePlatynereisBody PatterningBioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology
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Six3 demarcates the anterior-most developing brain region in bilaterian animals

2010

Abstract Background The heads of annelids (earthworms, polychaetes, and others) and arthropods (insects, myriapods, spiders, and others) and the arthropod-related onychophorans (velvet worms) show similar brain architecture and for this reason have long been considered homologous. However, this view is challenged by the 'new phylogeny' placing arthropods and annelids into distinct superphyla, Ecdysozoa and Lophotrochozoa, together with many other phyla lacking elaborate heads or brains. To compare the organisation of annelid and arthropod heads and brains at the molecular level, we investigated head regionalisation genes in various groups. Regionalisation genes subdivide developing animals …

Most recent common ancestor0604 Geneticsanimal structuresAnnelidbiologyResearchLophotrochozoaZoology0608 Zoologybiology.organism_classificationEvolutionary biologyGeneticsHomeoboxEuperipatoidesArthropodEcdysozoaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDevelopmental BiologyPlatynereisEvoDevo
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Competence of blastomeres for the expression of molecular tissue markers is acquired by diverse mechanisms in the embryo of Platynereis (Annelida)

1992

This paper is devoted to the role of cell divisions for the establishment of histospecificity in the embryo of the spiralian, Platynereis dumerilii (Annelida). We have incubated successive cleavage stages in cytochalasin B (CCB) and observed whether the cells thereafter were able to acquire the competence for expressing histospecific antigens of larval gland cells (labelled by the monoclonal antibody OI64) and of neural components of the ventral nerve cord (labelled by mAb OI7 or by testing acety1cholinesterase activity), respectively. Incubation in CCB results in permanent cleavage arrest, but does not necessarily interfere with biochemical differentiation of such markers. Synthesis of the…

NeurogenesisEmbryogenesisEmbryoCell fate determinationBiologybiology.organism_classificationCell biologyNeuroblastVentral nerve cordImmunologyGeneticsStem cellDevelopmental BiologyPlatynereisRoux's Archives of Developmental Biology
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Two light sensors decode moonlight versus sunlight to adjust a plastic circadian/circalunidian clock to moon phase

2021

AbstractMany species synchronize their physiology and behavior to specific hours. It is commonly assumed that sunlight acts as the main entrainment signal for ~24h clocks. However, the moon provides similarly regular time information, and increasingly studies report correlations between diel behavior and lunidian cycles. Yet, mechanistic insight into the possible influences of the moon on ~24hr timers is scarce.We studiedPlatynereis dumeriliiand uncover that the moon, besides its role in monthly timing, also schedules the exact hour of nocturnal swarming onset to the nights’ darkest times. Moonlight adjusts a plastic clock, exhibiting <24h (moonlit) or >24h (no moon) periodicity. Abun…

SunlightMoonlightLight sensitivityCryptochromebiologyCircadian rhythmNocturnalbiology.organism_classificationEntrainment (chronobiology)PlatynereisAstrobiology
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Molecular specification of cell lines in the embryo of Platynereis (Annelida)

1992

In this study we describe the site and moment of histospecific differentiation in developmental stages of the annelid Platynereis dumerilii by use of biochemical markers. The monoclonal antibody (mab) OI7 and uncloned hybridoma supernatants (pAb's) OI8, OI10, OI46 and OI69 recognize neural antigens that appear asynchronously during development. By an enzymatic test, acetylcholinesterase (AChE) was found specific for nervous tissue as well. The patterns of neural structures labelled by antibodies differ, however, from those revealed by AChE staining. Experimental inhibition of transcription (with actinomycin D) and of translation (using puromycin) demonstrate that the expression of histospec…

biologymedicine.drug_classEmbryogenesisEmbryoMonoclonal antibodybiology.organism_classificationengrailedCell biologychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCell culturePuromycinImmunologyGeneticsmedicineDevelopmental biologyDevelopmental BiologyPlatynereisRoux's Archives of Developmental Biology
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A morphometric comparison of dissimilar early development in sibling species of Platynereis (Annelida, Polychaeta)

1992

Early development of Platynereis massiliensis was studied in serial sections of fixed embryos and in living or fixed embryos whose nuclei had been made visible with a fluorescent label. The unfertilized egg is an ellipsoid with three axes of differing length. The longest axis corresponds to the dorsoventral axis of the developing embryo. Egg volume is ten times that in the sibling species, P. dumerilii, mainly due to increased yolk content. The timing and spatial pattern of cleavage were observed from first cleavage to the 62-cell stage. Volumes of the blastomeres, their nuclei, their yolk-free cytoplasm and their yolk were determined from serial sections up to the 29-cell stage. In the P. …

food.ingredientZygoteEmbryogenesisEmbryoBlastomereAnatomyBiologyCleavage (embryo)biology.organism_classificationCell biologyfoodYolkembryonic structuresGeneticsDevelopmental biologyDevelopmental BiologyPlatynereisRoux's Archives of Developmental Biology
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