scholarly journals Early developmental asymmetries in cell lineage trees in living individuals

Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 371 (6535) ◽  
pp. 1245-1248
Author(s):  
Liana Fasching ◽  
Yeongjun Jang ◽  
Simone Tomasi ◽  
Jeremy Schreiner ◽  
Livia Tomasini ◽  
...  

Mosaic mutations can be used to track cell lineages in humans. We used cell cloning to analyze embryonic cell lineages in two living individuals and a postmortem human specimen. Of 10 reconstructed postzygotic divisions, none resulted in balanced contributions of daughter lineages to tissues. In both living individuals, one of two lineages from the first cleavage was dominant across tissues, with 90% frequency in blood. We propose that the efficiency of DNA repair contributes to lineage imbalance. Allocation of lineages in postmortem brain correlated with anterior-posterior axis, associating lineage history with cell fate choices in embryos. We establish a minimally invasive framework for defining cell lineages in any living individual, which paves the way for studying their relevance in health and disease.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liana Fasching ◽  
Yeongjun Jang ◽  
Simone Tomasi ◽  
Jeremy Schreiner ◽  
Livia Tomasini ◽  
...  

AbstractPost-zygotic mosaic mutations can be used to track cell lineages in humans. By using cell cloning and induced pluripotent cell lines, we analyzed early cell lineages in two living individuals (a patient and a control), and a postmortem human specimen. Of ten reconstructed post-zygotic divisions, none resulted in balanced contributions of daughter lineages to tissues. In both living individuals one of two lineages from the first cleavage was dominant across tissues, with 90% frequency in blood. We propose that the efficiency of DNA repair contributes to lineage imbalance. Allocation of lineages in postmortem brain correlated with anterior-posterior axis, associating lineage history with cell fate choices in embryos. Recurrence of germline variants as mosaic suggested that certain loci may be particularly susceptible to mutagenesis. We establish a minimally invasive framework for defining cell lineages in any living individual, which paves the way for studying their relevance in health and disease.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Damien G. Hicks ◽  
Terence P. Speed ◽  
Mohammed Yassin ◽  
Sarah M. Russell

AbstractNew approaches to lineage tracking allow the study of cell differentiation over many generations of cells during development in multicellular organisms. Understanding the variability observed in these lineage trees requires new statistical methods. Whereas invariant cell lineages, such as that for the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, can be described using a lineage map, defined as the fixed pattern of phenotypes overlaid onto the binary tree structure, the variability of cell lineages from higher organisms makes it impossible to draw a single lineage map. Here, we introduce lineage variability maps which describe the pattern of second-order variation throughout the lineage tree. These maps can be undirected graphs of the partial correlations between every lineal position or directed graphs showing the dynamics of bifurcated patterns in each subtree. By using the symmetry invariance of a binary tree to develop a generalized spectral analysis for cell lineages, we show how to infer these graphical models for lineages of any depth from sample sizes of only a few pedigrees. When tested on pedigrees from C. elegans expressing a marker for pharyngeal differentiation potential, the maps recover essential features of the known lineage map. When applied to highly-variable pedigrees monitoring cell size in T lymphocytes, the maps show how most of the phenotype is set by the founder naive T cell. Lineage variability maps thus elevate the concept of the lineage map to the population level, addressing questions about the potency and dynamics of cell lineages and providing a way to quantify the progressive restriction of cell fate with increasing depth in the tree.Author summaryMulticellular organisms develop from a single fertilized egg by sequential cell divisions. The progeny from these divisions adopt different traits that are transmitted and modified through many generations. By tracking how cell traits change with each successive cell division throughout the family, or lineage, tree, it has been possible to understand where and how these modifications are controlled at the single-cell level, thereby addressing questions about, for example, the developmental origin of tissues, the sources of differentiation in immune cells, or the relationship between primary tumors and metastases. Such lineages often show large variability, with apparently identical founder cells giving rise to different patterns of descendants. Fundamental scientific questions, such as about the range of possible cell types a cell can give rise to, are often about this variability. To characterize this variation, and thus understand the lineage at the population level, we introduce lineage variability maps. Using data from worm and mammalian cell lineages we show how these maps provide quantifiable answers to questions about any developing lineage, such as the potency of founder cells and the progressive restriction of cell fate at each stage in the tree.


Studies of the role of cell lineage in development began in the latter part of the 19th century, fell into decline in the early part of the 20th, and were revived about 20 years ago. This recent revival was accompanied by the introduction of new and powerful analytical techniques. Concepts of importance for cell lineage studies include the principal division modes by which a cell may give rise to its descendant clone (proliferative, stem cell and diversifying); developmental determinacy , or indeterminacy , which refer to the degree to which the normal cleavage pattern of the early embryo and the developmental fate of its individual cells is, or is not, the same in specimen after specimen; commitment , which refers to the restriction of the developmental potential of a pluripotent embryonic cell; and equivalence group , which refers to two or more equivalently pluripotent cell clones that normally take on different fates but of which under abnormal conditions one clone can take on the fate of another. Cell lineage can be inferred to have a causative role in developmental cell fate in embryos in which induced changes in cell division patterns lead to changes in cell fate. Moreover, such a causative role of cell lineage is suggested by cases where homologous cell types characteristic of a symmetrical and longitudinally metameric body plan arise via homologous cell lineages. The developmental pathways of commitment to particular cell fates proceed according to a mixed typologic and topographic hierarchy, which appears to reflect an evolutionary compromise between maximizing the ease of ordering the spatial distribution of the determinants of commitment and minimizing the need for migration of differentially committed embryonic cells. Comparison of the developmental cell lineages in leeches and insects indicates that the early course of embryogenesis is radically different in these phyletically related taxa. This evolutionary divergence of the course of early embryogenesis appears to be attributable to an increasing prevalence of polyclonal rather than monoclonal commitment in the phylogenetic line leading from an annelid-like ancestor to insects.


Genetics ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. 435-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Robert Horvitz ◽  
John E Sulston

ABSTRACT Twenty-four mutants that alter the normally invariant post-embryonic cell lineages of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans have been isolated and genetically characterized. In some of these mutants, cell divisions fail that occur in wild-type animals; in other mutants, cells divide that do not normally do so. The mutants differ in the specificities of their defects, so that it is possible to identify mutations that affect some cell lineages but not others. These mutants define 14 complementation groups, which have been mapped. The abnormal phenotype of most of the cell-lineage mutants results from a single recessive mutation; however, the excessive cell divisions characteristic of one strain, CB1322, require the presence of two unlinked recessive mutations. All 24 cell-lineage mutants display incomplete penetrance and/or variable expressivity. Three of the mutants are suppressed by pleiotropic suppressors believed to be specific for null alleles, suggesting that their phenotypes result from the complete absence of gene activity.


Development ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 943-952 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Cui ◽  
C.Q. Doe

Cell diversity in the Drosophila central nervous system (CNS) is primarily generated by the invariant lineage of neural precursors called neuroblasts. We used an enhancer trap screen to identify the ming gene, which is transiently expressed in a subset of neuroblasts at reproducible points in their cell lineage (i.e. in neuroblast ‘sublineages’), suggesting that neuroblast identity can be altered during its cell lineage. ming encodes a predicted zinc finger protein and loss of ming function results in precise alterations in CNS gene expression, defects in axonogenesis and embryonic lethality. We propose that ming controls cell fate within neuroblast cell lineages.


Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (10) ◽  
pp. 3175-3185 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.Q. Martindale ◽  
J.Q. Henry

The nemerteans belong to a phylum of coelomate worms that display a highly conserved pattern of cell divisions referred to as spiral cleavage. It has recently been shown that the fates of the four embryonic cell quadrants in two species of nemerteans are not homologous to those in other spiralian embryos, such as the annelids and molluscs (Henry, J. Q. and Martindale, M. Q. (1994a) Develop. Genetics 15, 64–78). Equal-cleaving molluscs utilize inductive interactions to establish quadrant-specific cell fates and embryonic symmetry properties following fifth cleavage. In order to elucidate the manner in which cell fates are established in nemertean embryos, we have conducted cell isolation and deletion experiments to examine the developmental potential of the early cleavage blastomeres of two equal-cleaving nemerteans, Nemertopsis bivittata and Cerebratulus lacteus. These two species display different modes of development: N. bivittata develops directly via a non-feeding larvae, while C. lacteus develops to form a feeding pilidium larva which undergoes a radical metamorphosis to give rise to the juvenile worm. By examining the development of certain structures and cell types characteristic of quadrant-specific fates for each of these species, we have shown that isolated blastomeres of the indirect-developing nemertean, C. lacteus, are capable of generating cell fates that are not a consequence of that cell's normal developmental program. For instance, dorsal blastomeres can form muscle fibers when cultured in isolation. In contrast, isolated blastomeres of the direct-developing species, N. bivittata do not regulate their development to the same extent. Some cell fates are specified in a precocious manner in this species, such as those that give rise to the eyes. Thus, these findings indicate that equal-cleaving spiralian embryos can utilize different mechanisms of cell fate and axis specification. The implications of these patterns of nemertean development are discussed in relation to experimental work in other spiralian embryos, and a model is presented that accounts for possible evolutionary changes in cell lineage and the process of cell fate specification amongst these protostome phyla.


Study of cell lineage in the mammalian embryo has relied heavily on the use of chimeras to follow the fate of genetically marked cells in later development. Such studies have often been limited by the types of genetic markers available; there are very few markers that allow analysis of the spatial distribution of individual cells at all stages of development. We have developed a marker system that is based on the identification of cells of Mus musculus origin in M. musculus-M. caroli chimeras by in situ DNA-DNA hybridization using a cloned probe to M. musculus satellite DNA. This provides the first ubiquitous in situ cell marker system for mammalian chimeras. We have recently refined the system by the use of biotin-labelled probes and detection of hybridization by streptavidin-peroxidase binding. This increases both the speed and the resolution of the assay. We have used the marker for cell lineage analysis in both embryonic and adult chimeras and results from analysis of the derivatives of early cell lineages in later development and study of coherent growth versus cell mixing in the postimplantation embryo are presented. The importance of understanding embryonic cell lineages as a prelude to molecular studies is emphasized.


2001 ◽  
Vol 194 (7) ◽  
pp. 991-1002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana C. Jaleco ◽  
Hélia Neves ◽  
Erik Hooijberg ◽  
Paula Gameiro ◽  
Nuno Clode ◽  
...  

Notch signaling is known to differentially affect the development of lymphoid B and T cell lineages, but it remains unclear whether such effects are specifically dependent on distinct Notch ligands. Using a cell coculture assay we observed that the Notch ligand Delta-1 completely inhibits the differentiation of human hematopoietic progenitors into the B cell lineage while promoting the emergence of cells with a phenotype of T cell/natural killer (NK) precursors. In contrast, Jagged-1 did not disturb either B or T cell/NK development. Furthermore, cells cultured in the presence of either Delta-1 or Jagged-1 can acquire a phenotype of NK cells, and Delta-1, but not Jagged-1, permits the emergence of a de novo cell population coexpressing CD4 and CD8. Our results thus indicate that distinct Notch ligands can mediate differential effects of Notch signaling and provide a useful system to further address cell-fate decision processes in lymphopoiesis.


Parasitology ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. DUNN ◽  
R. S. TERRY ◽  
D. E. TANEYHILL

The amphipod Gammarus duebeni harbours several species of vertically transmitted, feminizing microsporidian parasites. G. duebeni were collected from 3 localities in the UK. Animals from Budle Bay, Northumberland, were infected with Octosporea effeminans, and those from Millport, Isle of Cumbrae and Fenham Flats, Northumberland were infected with microsporidia of the genus Nosema. We derived expected distributions of parasites per host embryonic cell by modelling parasite transmission as a multitype, Galton–Watson branching process. Parasite prevalence (proportion of females infected) was significantly heterogeneous among localities. Parasite burden in zygotes was much higher for females infected with Nosema than in animals infected with O. effeminans. There was no significant difference between localities in the number of Nosema in the zygotes. Comparison of models and data from 64-cell host embryos showed that the distributions of parasites per cell were consistent with the hypothesis that sorting of parasites into daughter cells is biased for at least 1 cell lineage. Host embryos infected with O. effeminans could expect to contain a growing number of parasites in each cell generation within such biased cell lineages; similar estimates for Nosema predict a decline in the number of parasites per cell within a biased lineage. We discuss the possibility that the 2 species of parasite may be employing different strategies in order to ensure transmission to the next host generation.


1994 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 507 ◽  
Author(s):  
L Selwood

All major embryonic and extra-embryonic cell lineages are established before implantation in marsupials. In reptiles, birds, monotremes and most marsupials, the zygote is polarized, sometimes markedly so, and the cleavage pattern in relation to the polarized state provides the mechanism for the generation of positional signals. These ensure that the embryonic cell lineages develop in the centre of the developing blastoderm or blastocyst epithelium and the extra-embryonic lineages at the periphery. The evolution of the vertebrate yolky egg was accompanied by a decreasing dependence on maternal determinants and increasing dependence on positional signals to determine cell fate. It is proposed that when a less yolky egg evolved, the mechanisms for determination of cell fate in a developing epithelium were retained. It is proposed that in marsupials, positional signals are involved in the determination of cell fate of embryonic and trophectoderm cells but do so in a two-dimensional epithelium not a three-dimensional morula. The next lineage formed is the primary endoderm which separates off from the primitive ectoderm in the embryoblast and eventually lines the blastocyst cavity. Positional signals are responsible for the determination of primary endoderm in eutherian mammals, birds and probably also marsupials. Order of cell division during cleavage provides a mechanism whereby some cells in the embryoblast of marsupials have earlier and greater contact with their neighbouring cells. The mechanism for determination of primary endoderm cells in the blastocyst epithelium is examined in the Virginia opossum and the stripe-faced dunnart.


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