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Autori principali: Kawamorita, Hiroki, Fujiwara, Haruka, Itayama, Kosuke, Onuma, Takeshi A, Sasakura, Yasunori, Ogasawara, Michio
Natura: Artículo científico
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: Tissue & cell 2026
Accesso online:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42242045/
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author Kawamorita, Hiroki
Fujiwara, Haruka
Itayama, Kosuke
Onuma, Takeshi A
Sasakura, Yasunori
Ogasawara, Michio
author_facet Kawamorita, Hiroki
Fujiwara, Haruka
Itayama, Kosuke
Onuma, Takeshi A
Sasakura, Yasunori
Ogasawara, Michio
Kawamorita, Hiroki
Fujiwara, Haruka
Itayama, Kosuke
Onuma, Takeshi A
Sasakura, Yasunori
Ogasawara, Michio
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Endostyle glandular element-specific expression of vWF-like genes in protochordates. Kawamorita, Hiroki Fujiwara, Haruka Itayama, Kosuke Onuma, Takeshi A Sasakura, Yasunori Ogasawara, Michio The endostyle in invertebrate chordates is a characteristic pharyngeal trait for mucus protein secretion during suspension feeding, while it is generally recognized as a homologous organ of the vertebrate follicular thyroid with iodine-concentrating and thyroid peroxidase activities. Our recent study on disturbances in thyroid peroxidase activity in protochordates (ascidians and lancelets) revealed a mucus sheet malformation in their pharynx; however, the main component of mucus sheets remains unclear. We herein focused on von Willebrand factor-like (vWFL) genes, which have been identified as endostyle-specific genes in the ascidian Ciona. We found that homologous genes of vWFL were shared among chordates with endostyles, but were lost in vertebrates lacking endostyles. An RNA-seq analysis of protochordates revealed that vWFL transcripts were restricted and prominent in their endostyles. In addition, a gene expression analysis using in situ hybridization revealed that protochordate vWFLs shared an exclusive gene expression pattern that "localized to a specific glandular cell of the endostyle, even though it was not identical among orthologs". Therefore, the ancestral endostyle may have established a "glandular element with vWFL expression", and may subsequently have diverged the "glandular element" and "vWFL expression" in the respective chordate lineages.
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language en
publishDate 2026
publisher Tissue & cell
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spellingShingle Endostyle glandular element-specific expression of vWF-like genes in protochordates.
Kawamorita, Hiroki
Fujiwara, Haruka
Itayama, Kosuke
Onuma, Takeshi A
Sasakura, Yasunori
Ogasawara, Michio
Endostyle glandular element-specific expression of vWF-like genes in protochordates. Kawamorita, Hiroki Fujiwara, Haruka Itayama, Kosuke Onuma, Takeshi A Sasakura, Yasunori Ogasawara, Michio The endostyle in invertebrate chordates is a characteristic pharyngeal trait for mucus protein secretion during suspension feeding, while it is generally recognized as a homologous organ of the vertebrate follicular thyroid with iodine-concentrating and thyroid peroxidase activities. Our recent study on disturbances in thyroid peroxidase activity in protochordates (ascidians and lancelets) revealed a mucus sheet malformation in their pharynx; however, the main component of mucus sheets remains unclear. We herein focused on von Willebrand factor-like (vWFL) genes, which have been identified as endostyle-specific genes in the ascidian Ciona. We found that homologous genes of vWFL were shared among chordates with endostyles, but were lost in vertebrates lacking endostyles. An RNA-seq analysis of protochordates revealed that vWFL transcripts were restricted and prominent in their endostyles. In addition, a gene expression analysis using in situ hybridization revealed that protochordate vWFLs shared an exclusive gene expression pattern that "localized to a specific glandular cell of the endostyle, even though it was not identical among orthologs". Therefore, the ancestral endostyle may have established a "glandular element with vWFL expression", and may subsequently have diverged the "glandular element" and "vWFL expression" in the respective chordate lineages.
title Endostyle glandular element-specific expression of vWF-like genes in protochordates.
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42242045/