Amphioxus is an important animal model for phylogenetic analysis,including comparative immunology.Exploring the immune system in amphioxus contributes to our understanding of the origin and evolution of the vertebrate immune system.We investigated the amphioxus immune system using ultrastructural examination and in situ hybridization.The expression patterns of TLR1(toll-like receptor 1),C1Q(complement component 1,q subcomponent),ECSIT(evolutionarily conserved signaling intermediate in Toll pathways),SoxC,DDAHa(Dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase a),and NOS(nitric oxide synthase) show that these genes play key roles in amphioxus immunity.Our results suggest that the epidermis and alimentary canal epithelium may play important roles in immune defense,while macrophages located in the coelom and so-called lymph spaces may also be crucial immune cells.
LIN YuShuangCHEN DongYanZHANG WeiCAI ZhaoPingCHEN ZhongKeZHANG NingMAO BingYuZHANG HongWei
Most Sox genes directly affect cell fate determination and differentiation. In this study,we isolated two Sox genes:SoxB2 and SoxC from amphioxus (Branchiostoma belcheri),the closest living invertebrate relative of the vertebrates. Alignments of SoxB2 and SoxC protein sequences and their vertebrate homologs show high conservation of their HMG domains. Phylogenic analysis shows that amphioxus SoxB2 and SoxC fall out of the vertebrate branches,suggesting that vertebrate homologs might arise from gene duplications during evolution. The two genes possess similar spatial and temporal expression patterns during embryogenesis and in adults. They are both maternally inherited. During neurulation,they are expressed in the neural ectoderm and archenterons. In adults,they are expressed not only in the nerve cord,but also in the gut,midgut diverticulum,gill and oocytes. These results suggest that amphioxus SoxB2 and SoxC might co-function and have conserved functions in the nervous system and gonads as their vertebrate homologs.
LIN YuShuang,CHEN DongYan,FAN QiuSheng & ZHANG HongWei Institute of Developmental Biology,Life Science College,Key Lab of Experimental Teratology of Ministry of Education,Shandong University,Jinan 250100,China