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  1. Pub 'PMID:16214891'

Title

Transposon-mediated insertional mutagenesis revealed the functions of animal cellulose synthase in the ascidian Ciona intestinalis.

Authors

Sasakura Y, Nakashima K, Awazu S, Matsuoka T, Nakayama A, Azuma J, Satoh N

Journal

Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2005; 102(42):15134-9

PubMed ID

PMID:16214891

Abstract

Tunicates are the only animals that perform cellulose biosynthesis. The tunicate gene for cellulose synthase, Ci-CesA, was likely acquired by horizontal transfer from bacteria and was a key innovation in the evolution of tunicates. Transposon-based mutagenesis in an ascidian, Ciona intestinalis, has generated a mutant, swimming juvenile (sj). Ci-CesA is the gene responsible for the sj mutant, in which a drastic reduction in cellulose was observed in the tunic. Furthermore, during metamorphosis, which in ascidians convert the vertebrate-like larva into a sessile filter feeder, sj showed abnormalities in the order of metamorphic events. In normal larvae, the metamorphic events in the trunk region are initiated after tail resorption. In contrast, sj mutant larvae initiated the metamorphic events in the trunk without tail resorption. Thus, sj larvae show a "swimming juvenile" phenotype, the juvenile-like trunk structure with a complete tail and the ability to swim. It is likely that ascidian cellulose synthase is required for the coordination of the metamorphic events in the trunk and tail in addition to cellulose biosynthesis.

Data related to this article

Fates affected

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Gene involved Fates

Genes functionally analyzed

1 result

Gene Name Experimental evidence
KH.C7.211 (KH.C7.211) Show experimental evidence

Genes whose regulation was studied

No result

Gene Name Experimental evidence

Genes with description of Wild Type Expression

No result

Gene Name Experimental evidence

Molecular Tools

1 result

Molecular Tool Name
CiCesA-MO

Constructs

No result

Construct Name Experimental evidence

RNA-Seq data

No result

Studied Transcriptome Experiment ID