AI Article Synopsis

  • The text talks about the process of oogenesis, where a special type of egg cell (oocyte) develops in frogs, focusing on where certain RNA molecules are located.
  • Researchers used a method called RNA sequencing to find many different types of RNA at the two ends of the frog egg: the animal pole and the vegetal pole.
  • They discovered some important RNA molecules that help in developing cells and showed that certain proteins play key roles in the early stages of germ cell development and movement.

Article Abstract

During oogenesis, hundreds of maternal RNAs are selectively localized to the animal or vegetal pole, including determinants of somatic and germline fates. Although microarray analysis has identified localized determinants, it is not comprehensive and is limited to known transcripts. Here, we utilized high-throughput RNA-sequencing analysis to comprehensively interrogate animal and vegetal pole RNAs in the fully grown Xenopus laevis oocyte. We identified 411 (198 annotated) and 27 (15 annotated) enriched mRNAs at the vegetal and animal pole, respectively. Ninety were novel mRNAs over 4-fold enriched at the vegetal pole and six were over 10-fold enriched at the animal pole. Unlike mRNAs, microRNAs were not asymmetrically distributed. Whole-mount in situ hybridization confirmed that all 17 selected mRNAs were localized. Biological function and network analysis of vegetally enriched transcripts identified protein-modifying enzymes, receptors, ligands, RNA-binding proteins, transcription factors and co-factors with five defining hubs linking 47 genes in a network. Initial functional studies of maternal vegetally localized mRNAs show that sox7 plays a novel and important role in primordial germ cell (PGC) development and that ephrinB1 (efnb1) is required for proper PGC migration. We propose potential pathways operating at the vegetal pole that highlight where future investigations might be most fruitful.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5394755PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dev.139220DOI Listing

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