Maternal effects are widespread and influence a variety of traits, for example, life history strategies, mate choice, and capacity to avoid predation. Therefore, maternal effects may also influence phenotypic plasticity of offspring, but few studies have addressed the relationship between maternal effects and phenotypic plasticity of offspring. We examined the relationship between a maternally influenced trait (egg size) and the phenotypic plasticity of the induction rate of the broad-headed morph in the salamander Hynobius retardatus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCertain plastic morphological responses of animals induced across a range of environmental conditions may be adapted for effective locomotor performance. Larvae of the salamander, Hynobius retardatus, occasionally swim upward to the surface to breathe air because aquatic respiration alone is insufficient to meet their increasing respiratory requirements for growth. We hypothesized that H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSome prey or predator organisms exhibit striking rapid morphological plastic changes with distinct morphology under the condition of predator or prey presence. Remote chemicals propagating from the inducing agents are the prevalent induction cues for most examples of induction of distinct morphs. Sonic and visual cues, as well as chemical cues, are known as triggers for induction of behavioural plasticity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen larvae of the salamander Hynobius retardatus were reared at a high temperature (28 degrees C) during their thermosensitive period (TSP=15-30 days after hatching), all larvae developed to phenotypic females irrespective of their genetic sexes. Hynobius P450 aromatase (P450arom) and Dmrt-1 complementary DNAs were isolated and their expression patterns were analyzed by competitive and conventional reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. While the P450arom gene was expressed predominantly in the ovary, Dmrt-1 was expressed exclusively in the testis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSex differentiation of gonads in amphibians is believed to be controlled genetically, but altered epigenetically or environmentally. When larvae of the salamander Hynobius retardatus were reared at defined temperatures from hatching to metamorphic stages, a high temperature (28 degrees C) induced exclusively female gonads (ovaries), whereas intermediate (20 and 23 degrees C) or lower (16 degrees C) temperatures produced a 1:1 sex ratio of the morphological gonads. The thermosensitive period was determined to be restricted from 15 to 30 days after hatching, just before or when sexual differentiation occurred.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo investigate the germ cell specification in urodeles, we cloned a DAZ-like sequence from the Japanese newt Cynops pyrrhogaster, Cydazl, and raised antibodies specific to Cydazl. Cydazl is a homologue of the human DAZ (deleted in azoospermia), DAZL, and Xenopus dazl genes, which are involved in gametogenesis or germ cell specification. During gametogenesis, expression of Cydazl mRNA and Cydazl protein was detected at first in the small previtellogenic oocytes in females but was not localized as seen in Xenopus and was restricted to secondary spermatogonia prior to meiosis in males.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLarvae of the salamander Hynobius retardatus have two distinct morphs: normal and broad-headed, cannibal morphs. We performed three experiments to differentiate among the following hypotheses: The broad-headed morph is induced to allow: (1) feeding on nutritious conspecifics; (2) exclusion of strong competitors for food or space; or (3) feeding on large, tough prey when smaller prey items are unavailable. When newly hatched larvae were reared with a heterospecific, Rana pirica (an anuran amphibian) tadpoles, the broad-headed morph was induced more frequently compared with those reared with conspecifics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrganisms sometimes change their phenotype to maximize fitness according to local environments. If the frequency of the broad-headed "cannibal" morph in the larvae of the salamander Hynobius retardatus has been evolutionarily maintained at a certain level within a population as a result of local adaptation, variations in its frequency should be found among different populations with environmental variation. We investigated whether variations in the frequency of the broad-headed morph were present in 2 different populations, Nopporo (a low-density population) and Erimo (a high-density population), by raising larvae from the respective populations under the same experimental conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDorsal-ventral (D-V) polarization in Xenopus eggs and embryos is achieved by passing through a series of complicated phenomena such as initial specification of the polarity before first cleavage, establishment of polarity during cleavage stages resulting in an acquisition of a unique developmental capacity by each blastomere, regional differentiation of mesoderm, and finally neural induction by Spemann's organizer. In order to gain an insight into basic mechanisms which govern D-V polarization, experimental modifications or perturbations of the body axis of embryos, including physical or chemical treatments of eggs, altered orientation of eggs under the normal gravity, centrifugation, manipulation of blastomeres, cytoplasmic withdrawal, and bisection or partial ligation of fertilized eggs are reviewed: all data are consistent with the concept that a cytoplasmic activity which becomes localized in the dorsal side of the egg is responsible or indispensable for the establishment of the D-V axis. The cytoplasmic activity is tentatively called "anterodorsal structure-forming activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen fertilized Xenopus laevis eggs were pricked just beneath the marginal zone with a thick glass needle prior to the first cleavage, a small amount of cytoplasm escaped into the exudate. Those eggs were placed in a poly L-lysine-coated plastic dish filled with 10% Ficoll solution. The location of the sperm entrance site (SES) of each egg was marked by scratching the surface of the plastic dish.
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