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Dive into the research topics where Marcos Simões-Costa is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcos Simões-Costa.


Development | 2015

Establishing neural crest identity: a gene regulatory recipe

Marcos Simões-Costa; Marianne E. Bronner

The neural crest is a stem/progenitor cell population that contributes to a wide variety of derivatives, including sensory and autonomic ganglia, cartilage and bone of the face and pigment cells of the skin. Unique to vertebrate embryos, it has served as an excellent model system for the study of cell behavior and identity owing to its multipotency, motility and ability to form a broad array of cell types. Neural crest development is thought to be controlled by a suite of transcriptional and epigenetic inputs arranged hierarchically in a gene regulatory network. Here, we examine neural crest development from a gene regulatory perspective and discuss how the underlying genetic circuitry results in the features that define this unique cell population. Summary: The current status of the neural crest gene regulatory network is reviewed, emphasizing the connections between transcription factors, signalling molecules and epigenetic modifiers.


Nature | 2015

Evolution of vertebrates as viewed from the crest

Stephen A. Green; Marcos Simões-Costa; Marianne E. Bronner

The origin of vertebrates was accompanied by the advent of a novel cell type: the neural crest. Emerging from the central nervous system, these cells migrate to diverse locations and differentiate into numerous derivatives. By coupling morphological and gene regulatory information from vertebrates and other chordates, we describe how addition of the neural-crest-specification program may have enabled cells at the neural plate border to acquire multipotency and migratory ability. Analysis of the topology of the neural crest gene regulatory network can serve as a useful template for understanding vertebrate evolution, including elaboration of neural crest derivatives.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

Dynamic and Differential Regulation of Stem Cell Factor FoxD3 in the Neural Crest Is Encrypted in the Genome

Marcos Simões-Costa; Sonja J. McKeown; Joanne Tan-Cabugao; Tatjana Sauka-Spengler; Marianne E. Bronner

The critical stem cell transcription factor FoxD3 is expressed by the premigratory and migrating neural crest, an embryonic stem cell population that forms diverse derivatives. Despite its important role in development and stem cell biology, little is known about what mediates FoxD3 activity in these cells. We have uncovered two FoxD3 enhancers, NC1 and NC2, that drive reporter expression in spatially and temporally distinct manners. Whereas NC1 activity recapitulates initial FoxD3 expression in the cranial neural crest, NC2 activity recapitulates initial FoxD3 expression at vagal/trunk levels while appearing only later in migrating cranial crest. Detailed mutational analysis, in vivo chromatin immunoprecipitation, and morpholino knock-downs reveal that transcription factors Pax7 and Msx1/2 cooperate with the neural crest specifier gene, Ets1, to bind to the cranial NC1 regulatory element. However, at vagal/trunk levels, they function together with the neural plate border gene, Zic1, which directly binds to the NC2 enhancer. These results reveal dynamic and differential regulation of FoxD3 in distinct neural crest subpopulations, suggesting that heterogeneity is encrypted at the regulatory level. Isolation of neural crest enhancers not only allows establishment of direct regulatory connections underlying neural crest formation, but also provides valuable tools for tissue specific manipulation and investigation of neural crest cell identity in amniotes.


Genome Research | 2014

Transcriptome analysis reveals novel players in the cranial neural crest gene regulatory network

Marcos Simões-Costa; Joanne Tan-Cabugao; Igor Antoshechkin; Tatjana Sauka-Spengler; Marianne E. Bronner

The neural crest is an embryonic stem cell population that gives rise to a multitude of derivatives. In particular, the cranial neural crest (CNC) is unique in its ability to contribute to both facial skeleton and peripheral ganglia. To gain further insight into the molecular underpinnings that distinguish the CNC from other embryonic tissues, we have utilized a CNC-specific enhancer as a tool to isolate a pure, region-specific NC subpopulation for transcriptional profiling. The resulting data set reveals previously unknown transcription factors and signaling pathways that may influence the CNCs ability to migrate and/or differentiate into unique derivatives. To elaborate on the CNC gene regulatory network, we evaluated the effects of knocking down known neural plate border genes and early neural crest specifier genes on selected neural crest-enriched transcripts. The results suggest that ETS1 and SOX9 may act as pan-neural crest regulators of the migratory CNC. Taken together, our analysis provides unprecedented characterization of the migratory CNC transcriptome and identifies new links in the gene regulatory network responsible for development of this critical cell population.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Structural shifts of aldehyde dehydrogenase enzymes were instrumental for the early evolution of retinoid-dependent axial patterning in metazoans

Tiago J. P. Sobreira; Ferdinand Marlétaz; Marcos Simões-Costa; Deborah Schechtman; Alexandre C. Pereira; Frédéric Brunet; Sarah Sweeney; Ariel M. Pani; Jochanan Aronowicz; Christopher J. Lowe; Bradley Davidson; Vincent Laudet; Marianne E. Bronner; Paulo Sergio Lopes de Oliveira; Michael Schubert; José Xavier-Neto

Aldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDHs) catabolize toxic aldehydes and process the vitamin A-derived retinaldehyde into retinoic acid (RA), a small diffusible molecule and a pivotal chordate morphogen. In this study, we combine phylogenetic, structural, genomic, and developmental gene expression analyses to examine the evolutionary origins of ALDH substrate preference. Structural modeling reveals that processing of small aldehydes, such as acetaldehyde, by ALDH2, versus large aldehydes, including retinaldehyde, by ALDH1A is associated with small versus large substrate entry channels (SECs), respectively. Moreover, we show that metazoan ALDH1s and ALDH2s are members of a single ALDH1/2 clade and that during evolution, eukaryote ALDH1/2s often switched between large and small SECs after gene duplication, transforming constricted channels into wide opened ones and vice versa. Ancestral sequence reconstructions suggest that during the evolutionary emergence of RA signaling, the ancestral, narrow-channeled metazoan ALDH1/2 gave rise to large ALDH1 channels capable of accommodating bulky aldehydes, such as retinaldehyde, supporting the view that retinoid-dependent signaling arose from ancestral cellular detoxification mechanisms. Our analyses also indicate that, on a more restricted evolutionary scale, ALDH1 duplicates from invertebrate chordates (amphioxus and ascidian tunicates) underwent switches to smaller and narrower SECs. When combined with alterations in gene expression, these switches led to neofunctionalization from ALDH1-like roles in embryonic patterning to systemic, ALDH2-like roles, suggesting functional shifts from signaling to detoxification.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Expression of Sympathetic Nervous System Genes in Lamprey Suggests Their Recruitment for Specification of a New Vertebrate Feature

Daniela Häming; Marcos Simões-Costa; Benjamin Uy; Jonathan Valencia; Tatjana Sauka-Spengler; Marianne Bronner-Fraser

The sea lamprey is a basal, jawless vertebrate that possesses many neural crest derivatives, but lacks jaws and sympathetic ganglia. This raises the possibility that the factors involved in sympathetic neuron differentiation were either a gnathostome innovation or already present in lamprey, but serving different purposes. To distinguish between these possibilities, we isolated lamprey homologues of transcription factors associated with peripheral ganglion formation and examined their deployment in lamprey embryos. We further performed DiI labeling of the neural tube combined with neuronal markers to test if neural crest-derived cells migrate to and differentiate in sites colonized by sympathetic ganglia in jawed vertebrates. Consistent with previous anatomical data in adults, our results in lamprey embryos reveal that neural crest cells fail to migrate ventrally to form sympathetic ganglia, though they do form dorsal root ganglia adjacent to the neural tube. Interestingly, however, paralogs of the battery of transcription factors that mediate sympathetic neuron differentiation (dHand, Ascl1 and Phox2b) are present in the lamprey genome and expressed in various sites in the embryo, but fail to overlap in any ganglionic structures. This raises the intriguing possibility that they may have been recruited during gnathostome evolution to a new function in a neural crest derivative.


Development | 2010

Insights into the organization of dorsal spinal cord pathways from an evolutionarily conserved raldh2 intronic enhancer

Hozana A. Castillo; Roberta M. Cravo; Ana Paula Azambuja; Marcos Simões-Costa; Sylvia Sura-Trueba; Jose Gonzalez; Esfir Slonimsky; Karla Almeida; José G. Abreu; Marcio Aa Almeida; Tiago José Paschoal Sobreira; Saulo Henrique Pires de Oliveira; Paulo S. L. Oliveira; Iskra A. Signore; Alicia Colombo; Miguel L. Concha; Tatjana S. Spengler; Marianne Bronner-Fraser; Marcelo A. Nobrega; Nadia Rosenthal; José Xavier-Neto

Comparative studies of the tetrapod raldh2 (aldh1a2) gene, which encodes a retinoic acid (RA) synthesis enzyme, have led to the identification of a dorsal spinal cord enhancer. Enhancer activity is directed dorsally to the roof plate and dorsal-most (dI1) interneurons through predicted Tcf- and Cdx-homeodomain binding sites and is repressed ventrally via predicted Tgif homeobox and ventral Lim-homeodomain binding sites. Raldh2 and Math1/Cath1 expression in mouse and chicken highlights a novel, transient, endogenous Raldh2 expression domain in dI1 interneurons, which give rise to ascending circuits and intraspinal commissural interneurons, suggesting roles for RA in the ontogeny of spinocerebellar and intraspinal proprioceptive circuits. Consistent with expression of raldh2 in the dorsal interneurons of tetrapods, we also found that raldh2 is expressed in dorsal interneurons throughout the agnathan spinal cord, suggesting ancestral roles for RA signaling in the ontogenesis of intraspinal proprioception.


Heart Development and Regeneration | 2010

Evolutionary Origins of Hearts

José Xavier-Neto; Brad Davidson; Marcos Simões-Costa; Rodrigo Abe Castro; Hozana A. Castillo; Allysson C. Sampaio; Ana Paula Azambuja

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses various kinds of animal circulatory pumps and utilizes a hierarchical set of concepts to analyze their evolution. It also defines the position occupied by vertebrate chambered hearts in relation to the other classes of animal pumping organs, such as arthropod dorsal vessels and mollusc chambered hearts, traces the origins of these diverse pumping organs, focuses on the evolution of deuterostome pumping organs, and discusses evolutionary scenarios regarding the origins of vertebrate hearts. The comparative study of pumping organs in bilaterian animals is rife with provoking and stimulating similarities that in some cases reflect true homologies. In other cases, however, the distinction is not yet possible, but it is helpful to note that the requisites for homology are very well known today, and that it is necessary to check the available evidence against these criteria. However, similarities between animal pumping organs need not be homologies to be interesting. In many cases, these similarities can be conveniently attributed to evolutionary parallelisms or to convergence (Hall, 2003; Xavier-Neto et al., 2007). These parallel or convergent solutions to the problems of animal pumping are, in a sense, actually more challenging than the cases of homology. The evolution of chambered hearts from the simple peristaltic organs of invertebrate chordates remains a fascinating problem whose evolutionary, developmental and genetic bases have been left largely untouched.


Developmental Cell | 2015

Axud1 Integrates Wnt Signaling and Transcriptional Inputs to Drive Neural Crest Formation

Marcos Simões-Costa; Michael Stone; Marianne E. Bronner

Neural crest cells are induced at the neural plate border by the combined action of transcription factors and signaling molecules. Here, we show that Axud1, a downstream effector of Wnt signaling, represents a critical missing link that integrates signaling and transcriptional cues to mediate neural crest formation. Axud1 is a transcription factor expressed in neural crest progenitors in a Wnt1/β-catenin-dependent manner. Axud1 loss leads to downregulation of multiple genes involved in neural crest specification, similar to the effects of Wnt1 knockdown. Importantly, Axud1 is sufficient to rescue neural crest formation after disruption of Wnt signaling. Furthermore, it physically interacts with neural plate border genes Pax7 and Msx1 in vivo to directly activate transcription of stem cell factor FoxD3, initiating the neural crest program. Thus, Axud1 integrates Wnt signaling with transcriptional inputs to endow the neural crest with its unique molecular signature.


Current Topics in Developmental Biology | 2016

The Neural Crest Migrating into the Twenty-First Century

Marianne E. Bronner; Marcos Simões-Costa

From the initial discovery of the neural crest over 150 years ago to the seminal studies of Le Douarin and colleagues in the latter part of the twentieth century, understanding of the neural crest has moved from the descriptive to the experimental. Now, in the twenty-first century, neural crest research has migrated into the genomic age. Here, we reflect upon the major advances in neural crest biology and the open questions that will continue to make research on this incredible vertebrate cell type an important subject in developmental biology for the century to come.

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Marianne E. Bronner

California Institute of Technology

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Marianne Bronner-Fraser

California Institute of Technology

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Benjamin Uy

California Institute of Technology

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Ana Paula Azambuja

Federal University of Paraná

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Joanne Tan-Cabugao

California Institute of Technology

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