
Left-right asymmetry in the sea urchin embryo: BMP and the asymmetrical origins of the adult.
Bilateral animals, including humans and most metazoans, are not perfectly symmetrical. Some internal structures are distributed asymmetrically to the right or left side. A conserved Nodal and BMP signaling system directs molecular pathways that impart the sidedness to those asymmetric structures. In the sea urchin embryo, one such asymmetrical structure, oddly enough, is the entire adult, which grows out of left sided structures produced in the larva. In a paper just published in PLOS Biology, BMP signaling is shown to be necessary early in larval development to initiate the asymmetric specification of one of those left-sided structures, called the left coelomic pouch. This study reports that BMP signaling activates a group of transcription factors asymmetrically in the left coelomic pouch only, which launch the pathway that eventually leads to the formation of the adult that emerges from the larva at metamorphosis.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Sea Urchins
- Embryo, Nonmammalian
- Developmental Biology
- Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
- Body Patterning
- Animals
- 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
- 31 Biological sciences
- 30 Agricultural, veterinary and food sciences
- 11 Medical and Health Sciences
Citation

Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Sea Urchins
- Embryo, Nonmammalian
- Developmental Biology
- Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
- Body Patterning
- Animals
- 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
- 31 Biological sciences
- 30 Agricultural, veterinary and food sciences
- 11 Medical and Health Sciences