Retinoic acid coordinates somitogenesis and left–right patterning in vertebrate embryos

J Vermot, O Pourquié - Nature, 2005 - nature.com
Nature, 2005nature.com
A striking feature of the body plan of a majority of animals is bilateral symmetry. Almost
nothing is known about the mechanisms controlling the symmetrical arrangement of the left
and right body sides during development. Here we report that blocking the production of
retinoic acid (RA) in chicken embryos leads to a desynchronization of somite formation
between the two embryonic sides, demonstrated by a shortened left segmented region. This
defect is linked to a loss of coordination of the segmentation clock oscillations. The …
Abstract
A striking feature of the body plan of a majority of animals is bilateral symmetry. Almost nothing is known about the mechanisms controlling the symmetrical arrangement of the left and right body sides during development. Here we report that blocking the production of retinoic acid (RA) in chicken embryos leads to a desynchronization of somite formation between the two embryonic sides, demonstrated by a shortened left segmented region. This defect is linked to a loss of coordination of the segmentation clock oscillations. The lateralization of this defect led us to investigate the relation between somitogenesis and the left–right asymmetry machinery, in RA-deficient embryos. Reversal of the situs in chick, or mouse embryos lacking RA results in a reversal of the somitogenesis laterality defect. Our data indicate that RA is important in buffering the lateralizing influence of the left–right machinery, thus permitting synchronization of the development of the two embryonic sides.
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