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Featured researches published by Yi-Lin Yan.


Development | 2005

A pair of Sox: distinct and overlapping functions of zebrafish sox9 co-orthologs in craniofacial and pectoral fin development

Yi-Lin Yan; John J. Willoughby; Dong Liu; Justin Gage Crump; Catherine Wilson; Craig T. Miller; Amy Singer; Charles B. Kimmel; Monte Westerfield; John H. Postlethwait

Understanding how developmental systems evolve after genome amplification is important for discerning the origins of vertebrate novelties, including neural crest, placodes, cartilage and bone. Sox9 is important for the development of these features, and zebrafish has two co-orthologs of tetrapod SOX9 stemming from an ancient genome duplication event in the lineage of ray-fin fish. We have used a genotype-driven screen to isolate a mutation deleting sox9b function, and investigated its phenotype and genetic interactions with a sox9a null mutation. Analysis of mutant phenotypes strongly supports the interpretation that ancestral gene functions partitioned spatially and temporally between Sox9 co-orthologs. Distinct subsets of the craniofacial skeleton, otic placode and pectoral appendage express each gene, and are defective in each single mutant. The double mutant phenotype is additive or synergistic. Ears are somewhat reduced in each single mutant but are mostly absent in the double mutant. Loss-of-function animals from mutations and morpholino injections, and gain-of-function animals injected with sox9a and sox9b mRNAs showed that sox9 helps regulate other early crest genes, including foxd3, sox10, snai1b and crestin, as well as the cartilage gene col2a1 and the bone gene runx2a; however, tfap2a was nearly unchanged in mutants. Chondrocytes failed to stack in sox9a mutants, failed to attain proper numbers in sox9b mutants and failed in both morphogenetic processes in double mutants. Pleiotropy can cause mutations in single copy tetrapod genes, such as Sox9, to block development early and obscure later gene functions. By contrast, subfunction partitioning between zebrafish co-orthologs of tetrapod genes, such as sox9a and sox9b, can relax pleiotropy and reveal both early and late developmental gene functions.


Nature Genetics | 2008

MicroRNA Mirn140 modulates Pdgf signaling during palatogenesis.

Johann K. Eberhart; Xinjun He; Mary E. Swartz; Yi-Lin Yan; Hao Song; Taylor C. Boling; Allison K Kunerth; Macie B. Walker; Charles B. Kimmel; John H. Postlethwait

Disruption of signaling pathways such as those mediated by sonic hedgehog (Shh) or platelet-derived growth factor (Pdgf) causes craniofacial abnormalities, including cleft palate. The role that microRNAs play in modulating palatogenesis, however, is completely unknown. We show that, in zebrafish, the microRNA Mirn140 negatively regulates Pdgf signaling during palatal development, and we provide a mechanism for how disruption of Pdgf signaling causes palatal clefting. The pdgf receptor alpha (pdgfra) 3′ UTR contained a Mirn140 binding site functioning in the negative regulation of Pdgfra protein levels in vivo. pdgfra mutants and Mirn140-injected embryos shared a range of facial defects, including clefting of the crest-derived cartilages that develop in the roof of the larval mouth. Concomitantly, the oral ectoderm beneath where these cartilages develop lost pitx2 and shha expression. Mirn140 modulated Pdgf-mediated attraction of cranial neural crest cells to the oral ectoderm, where crest-derived signals were necessary for oral ectodermal gene expression. Mirn140 loss of function elevated Pdgfra protein levels, altered palatal shape and caused neural crest cells to accumulate around the optic stalk, a source of the ligand Pdgfaa. These results suggest that the conserved regulatory interactions of mirn140 and pdgfra define an ancient mechanism of palatogenesis, and they provide candidate genes for cleft palate.


Development | 2003

Fgf3 and Fgf8 dependent and independent transcription factors are required for otic placode specification

Dong Liu; Hsin Chu; Lisa Maves; Yi-Lin Yan; Paul A. Morcos; John H. Postlethwait; Monte Westerfield

The vertebrate inner ear develops from the otic placode, an ectodermal thickening that forms adjacent to the presumptive hindbrain. Previous studies have suggested that competent ectodermal cells respond to signals from adjacent tissues to form the placode. Members of the Fgf family of growth factors and the Dlx family of transcription factors have been implicated in this signal-response pathway. We show that compromising Fgf3 and Fgf8 signaling blocks ear development; only a few scattered otic cells form. Removal of dlx3b, dlx4b and sox9a genes together also blocks ear development, although a few residual cells form an otic epithelium. These cells fail to form if sox9b function is also blocked. Combined loss of Fgf signaling and the three transcription factor genes, dlx3b, dlx4b and sox9a, also completely eliminates all indications of otic cells. Expression of sox9a but not dlx3b, dlx4b or sox9b requires Fgf3 and Fgf8. Our results provide evidence for Fgf3- and Fgf8-dependent and -independent genetic pathways for otic specification and support the notion that Fgf3 and Fgf8 function to induce both the otic placode and the epithelial organization of the otic vesicle.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002

One melanocortin 4 and two melanocortin 5 receptors from zebrafish show remarkable conservation in structure and pharmacology

Aneta Ringholm; Robert Fredriksson; Natalia Poliakova; Yi-Lin Yan; John H. Postlethwait; Dan Larhammar; Helgi B. Schiöth

We report the cloning, genome mapping, functional expression, pharmacology and anatomical distribution of three melanocortin (MC) receptors from zebrafish (z). Phylogenetic analysis showed with high bootstrap support that these genes represent one MC4 receptor and two MC5 receptors. Chromosomal mapping showed conserved synteny between regions containing zMC4 and human (h) MC4 receptors, whereas the two zMC5 receptor genes map on chromosome segments in which the zebrafish has several genes with two orthologues of a single mammalian gene. It is likely that the two copies of zMC5 receptors arose through a separate duplication in the teleost lineage. The zMC4, zMC5a, and zMC5b receptors share 70–71% overall amino acid identity with the respective human orthologues and over 90% in three TM regions believed to be most important for ligand binding. All three zebrafish receptors also show pharmacological properties remarkably similar to their human orthologues, with similar affinities and the same potency order, when expressed and characterized in radioligand binding assay for the natural melanocyte stimulating hormone (MSH) peptides α‐, β‐, and γ‐MSH. Stimulation of transfected mammalian cells with α‐MSH caused a dose‐dependent increase in intracellular cAMP levels for all three zebrafish receptors. All three genes were expressed in the brain, eye, ovaries and gastrointestinal tract, whereas the zMC5b receptor was also found in the heart, as determined by RT‐PCR. Our studies, which represent the first characterization of MC receptors in a nonamniote species, indicate that the MC receptor subtypes arose very early in vertebrate evolution. Important pharmacological and functional properties, as well as gene structure and syntenic relationships have been highly conserved over a period of more than 400 million years implying that these receptors participate in vital physiological functions.


Methods in Cell Biology | 1998

The zebrafish genome.

John H. Postlethwait; Angel Amores; Allan Force; Yi-Lin Yan

Publisher Summary Analysis of the zebrafish gene map suggests that during the course of vertebrate evolution, the zebrafish and human lineages have shared two rounds of whole genome duplication, and a third whole genome duplication event probably occurred before the teleost radiation. For many genes in humans, there may be two copies in zebrafish, and for many human chromosome segments, zebrafish is likely to have two such segments. The haploid zebrafish genome has 25 chromosomes, most of which are difficult to distinguish. These chromosomes contain about 1.7 X l0 9 base pairs of DNA, about half the mammalian genome size. The first genetic map of the zebrafish included about 400 genetic markers, mostly random amplified polymorphic DNAs (RAPDs), along with a few genes and mutations. The conservation of genome organization between humans and zebrafish can facilitate the transferal of information from one species to the other. The inference that zebrafish lineage appeared to have suffered an extra polyploidization step not experienced by mammals simply means that both zebrafish copies of a mammalian gene should be studied for better connectivity of molecular genetic mechanisms of development in zebrafish to the tetrapod—especially human—condition.


Genetics | 2014

Wild Sex in Zebrafish: Loss of the Natural Sex Determinant in Domesticated Strains

Catherine Wilson; Samantha K. High; Braedan M. McCluskey; Angel Amores; Yi-Lin Yan; Tom A. Titus; Jennifer L. Anderson; Peter Batzel; Michael J. Carvan; Manfred Schartl; John H. Postlethwait

Sex determination can be robustly genetic, strongly environmental, or genetic subject to environmental perturbation. The genetic basis of sex determination is unknown for zebrafish (Danio rerio), a model for development and human health. We used RAD-tag population genomics to identify sex-linked polymorphisms. After verifying this “RAD-sex” method on medaka (Oryzias latipes), we studied two domesticated zebrafish strains (AB and TU), two natural laboratory strains (WIK and EKW), and two recent isolates from nature (NA and CB). All four natural strains had a single sex-linked region at the right tip of chromosome 4, enabling sex genotyping by PCR. Genotypes for the single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) with the strongest statistical association to sex suggested that wild zebrafish have WZ/ZZ sex chromosomes. In natural strains, “male genotypes” became males and some “female genotypes” also became males, suggesting that the environment or genetic background can cause female-to-male sex reversal. Surprisingly, TU and AB lacked detectable sex-linked loci. Phylogenomics rooted on D. nigrofasciatus verified that all strains are monophyletic. Because AB and TU branched as a monophyletic clade, we could not rule out shared loss of the wild sex locus in a common ancestor despite their independent domestication. Mitochondrial DNA sequences showed that investigated strains represent only one of the three identified zebrafish haplogroups. Results suggest that zebrafish in nature possess a WZ/ZZ sex-determination mechanism with a major determinant lying near the right telomere of chromosome 4 that was modified during domestication. Strains providing the zebrafish reference genome lack key components of the natural sex-determination system but may have evolved variant sex-determining mechanisms during two decades in laboratory culture.


Developmental Dynamics | 2000

Expression of sox11 gene duplicates in zebrafish suggests the reciprocal loss of ancestral gene expression patterns in development

Sara P. De Martino; Yi-Lin Yan; Trevor Jowett; John H. Postlethwait; Zoltán M. Varga; Alan Ashworth; Caroline A. Austin

To investigate the role of sox genes in vertebrate development, we have isolated sox11 from zebrafish (Danio rerio). Two distinct classes of sox11‐related cDNAs were identified, sox11a and sox11b. The predicted protein sequences shared 75% identity. In a gene phylogeny, both sox11a and sox11b cluster with human, mouse, chick, and Xenopus Sox11, indicating that zebrafish, like Xenopus, has two orthologues of tetrapod Sox11. The work reported here investigates the evolutionary origin of these two gene duplicates and the consequences of their duplication for development. The sox11a and sox11b genes map to linkage groups 17 and 20, respectively, together with other loci whose orthologues are syntenic with human SOX11, suggesting that during the fish lineage, a large chromosome region sharing conserved syntenies with mammals has become duplicated. Studies in mouse and chick have shown that Sox11 is expressed in the central nervous system during development. Expression patterns of zebrafish sox11a and sox11b confirm that they are expressed in the developing nervous system, including the forebrain, midbrain, hindbrain, eyes, and ears from an early stage. Other sites of expression include the fin buds and somites. The two sox genes, sox11a and sox11b, are expressed in both overlapping and distinct sites. Their expression patterns suggest that sox11a and sox11b may share the developmental domainsof the single Sox11 gene present in mouse and chick. For example, zebrafish sox11a is expressed in the anterior somites, and zebrafish sox11b is expressed in the posterior somites, but the single Sox11 gene of mouse is expressed in all the somites. Thus, the zebrafish duplicate genes appear to have reciprocally lost expression domains present in the sox11 gene of the last common ancestor of tetrapods and zebrafish. This splitting of the roles of Sox11 between two paralogues suggests that regulatory elements governing the expression of the sox11 gene in the common ancestor of zebrafish and tetrapods may have been reciprocally mutated in the zebrafish gene duplicates. This is consistent with duplicate gene evolution via a duplication‐degeneration‐complementation process. Dev Den;217:279–292.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Zebrafish Acetylcholinesterase Is Encoded by a Single Gene Localized on Linkage Group 7 GENE STRUCTURE AND POLYMORPHISM; MOLECULAR FORMS AND EXPRESSION PATTERN DURING DEVELOPMENT

Christelle Bertrand; Arnaud Chatonnet; Christina Takke; Yi-Lin Yan; John H. Postlethwait; Jean-Pierre Toutant; Xavier Cousin

We cloned and sequenced the acetylcholinesterase gene and cDNA of zebrafish, Danio rerio. We found a single gene (ache) located on linkage group LG7. The relative organization of ache, eng2, and shhgenes is conserved between zebrafish and mammals and defines a synteny. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis was allowed to identify several allelic variations. We also identified two transposable elements in non-coding regions of the gene. Compared with other vertebrate acetylcholinesterase genes, achegene contains no alternative splicing at 5′ or 3′ ends where only a T exon is present. The translated sequence is 60–80% identical to acetylcholinesterases of the vertebrates and exhibits an extra loop specific to teleosts. Analysis of molecular forms showed a transition, at the time of hatching, from the globular G4 form to asymmetric A12 form that becomes prominent in adults. In situhybridization and enzymatic activity detection on whole embryos confirmed early expression of the acetylcholinesterase gene in nervous and muscular tissues. We found no butyrylcholinesterase gene or activity in Danio. These findings make zebrafish a promising model to study function of acetylcholinesterase during development and regulation of molecular forms assembly in vivo.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002

Zebrafish genes for neuropeptide Y and peptide YY reveal origin by chromosome duplication from an ancestral gene linked to the homeobox cluster

Charlotte Söderberg; Amanda Wraith; Maria Ringvall; Yi-Lin Yan; John H. Postlethwait; Lennart Brodin; Dan Larhammar

Abstract: Neuropeptide Y (NPY) and peptide YY (PYY) are related 36‐amino acid peptides. NPY is widely distributed in the nervous system and has several physiological roles. PYY serves as an intestinal hormone as well as a neuropeptide. We report here cloning of the npy and pyy genes in zebrafish (Danio rerio). NPY differs at only one to four amino acid positions from NPY in other jawed vertebrates. Zebrafish PYY differs at three positions from PYY from other fishes and at 10 positions from mammals. In situ hybridization showed that neurons containing NPY mRNA have a widespread distribution in the brain, particularly in the telencephalon, optic tectum, and rhombencephalon. PYY mRNA was found mainly in brainstem neurons, as reported previously for vertebrates as divergent as the rat and the lamprey, suggesting an essential role for PYY in these neurons. PYY mRNA was observed also in the telencephalon. These results were confirmed by immunocytochemistry. As in the human, the npy gene is located adjacent to homeobox (hox) gene cluster A (copy a in zebrafish), whereas the pyy gene is located close to hoxBa. This suggests that npy and pyy arose from a common ancestral gene in a chromosomal duplication event that also involved the hox gene clusters. As zebrafish has seven hox clusters, it is possible that additional NPY family genes exist or have existed. Also, the NPY receptor system seems to be more complex in zebrafish than in mammals, with at least two receptor genes without known mammalian orthologues.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2010

Molecular pedomorphism underlies craniofacial skeletal evolution in Antarctic notothenioid fishes

R. Craig Albertson; Yi-Lin Yan; Tom A. Titus; Eva Pisano; Marino Vacchi; Pamela C. Yelick; H. William Detrich; John H. Postlethwait

BackgroundPedomorphism is the retention of ancestrally juvenile traits by adults in a descendant taxon. Despite its importance for evolutionary change, there are few examples of a molecular basis for this phenomenon. Notothenioids represent one of the best described species flocks among marine fishes, but their diversity is currently threatened by the rapidly changing Antarctic climate. Notothenioid evolutionary history is characterized by parallel radiations from a benthic ancestor to pelagic predators, which was accompanied by the appearance of several pedomorphic traits, including the reduction of skeletal mineralization that resulted in increased buoyancy.ResultsWe compared craniofacial skeletal development in two pelagic notothenioids, Chaenocephalus aceratus and Pleuragramma antarcticum, to that in a benthic species, Notothenia coriiceps, and two outgroups, the threespine stickleback and the zebrafish. Relative to these other species, pelagic notothenioids exhibited a delay in pharyngeal bone development, which was associated with discrete heterochronic shifts in skeletal gene expression that were consistent with persistence of the chondrogenic program and a delay in the osteogenic program during larval development. Morphological analysis also revealed a bias toward the development of anterior and ventral elements of the notothenioid pharyngeal skeleton relative to dorsal and posterior elements.ConclusionsOur data support the hypothesis that early shifts in the relative timing of craniofacial skeletal gene expression may have had a significant impact on the adaptive radiation of Antarctic notothenioids into pelagic habitats.

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