Regulation of posterior body and epidermal morphogenesis in zebrafish by localized Yap1 and Wwtr1

  1. David Kimelman  Is a corresponding author
  2. Natalie L Smith
  3. Jason Kuan Han Lai
  4. Didier YR Stainier
  1. University of Washington, United States
  2. Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research, Germany
12 figures, 4 videos, 3 tables and 5 additional files

Figures

yap1;wwtr1 double mutants exhibit severely altered posterior development.

(A) Schematic showing the two mutants used in this work. TEAD BD is the TEAD binding domain, TAD is the Transcriptional Activation Domain, and WW, SH and PDZ are protein interaction domains. The black bar indicates new sequence following the frame shift caused by the mutation. (B) Time course showing the development of the posterior body defect in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants. The same sibling and double mutant embryos are photographed at all three stages. (C) Phalloidin staining shows that the somites form in the mutants but never acquire the chevron shape found in wild-type embryos. 24-somite stage (21 hpf) embryos, anterior to the left. (D) Embryos with a yap1-/-;wwtr1+/- genotype show a milder posterior body defect at 72 hpf (n = 15). Pericardial edema is also variably present. (E,F) Midline confocal sections of the trunk with somite 1 on the left side of a sibling (E) and a yap1;wwtr1 double mutant embryo (F) at the 24-somite stage.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.002
Figure 2 with 2 supplements
Yap1 is localized to the presumptive epidermis and axis.

(A) Yap1 protein is expressed in the presumptive epidermis (arrows) and midline (arrowhead) of an 18-somite stage embryo. (B) Co-stain with the notochord marker no tail (ntl), in green, using FISH demonstrates Yap1 expression, in red, in the notochord. (C) No reactivity with the Yap1 antibody was observed in yap1-/- mutant embryos. Note that the longer Proteinase K digestion used in the standard FISH protocol reduced the presumptive epidermal Yap1 staining. All embryos are at 18 somites with anterior to the left.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.004
Figure 2—figure supplement 1
Yap1 localizes to the presumptive epidermis.

A combination of FISH and immunofluorescence was used to co-stain embryos for Yap1 protein and keratin 4 or keratin 8 mRNA, which are restricted to the presumptive epidermis. A brief (5 min) Proteinase K step was used for the FISH, which preserves the presumptive epidermal Yap1 stain but does not allow for strong notochord staining.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.005
Figure 2—figure supplement 2
Wwtr1 and medaka Yap1 localize to the presumptive epidermis and notochord.

(A–C) Wwtr1 expression in zebrafish embryos. Wwtr1 is expressed in the presumptive epidermis (arrow) and notochord (arrowhead) of an 18-somite embryo (A). Co-stain with the notochord marker no tail (ntl) (in green) demonstrates Wwtr1 expression (in red) in the notochord (B). No reactivity with the anti-Wwtr1 antibody was observed in wwtr1 mutant embryos (C). All embryos are 18 somites with anterior to the left. (D) Yap1 is expressed in the presumptive epidermis (arrow) and notochord (arrowhead) of an 18-somite medaka embryo.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.006
Figure 3 with 2 supplements
Regulation of ecrg4b expression by Yap1 and Wwtr1.

(A,B) ecrg4b is expressed in the presumptive epidermis of sibling embryos (A) but is not expressed in yap1;wwtr1 double mutant embryos (B). (C–F) Transgenic embryos obtained from an outcross of hemizygous HS:DN-yap or HS:CA-yap adults were heat shocked at the 4-somite stage and then raised to 18 somites. The genotype of the embryos was determined by PCR after the in situ hybridization to be either transgenic or non-transgenic control. Expression of DN-yap decreased ecrg4b expression relative to non-transgenic controls (C,D, n = 6 for each) whereas CA-yap enhanced ecrg4b expression (E,F, n = 4 for each). (G,H) Embryos analyzed using FISH probe to ecrg4b demonstrates that CA-yap increases expression of ecrg4b only in the epidermis (n = 4 for each). All embryos are at the 18-somite stage.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.008
Figure 3—figure supplement 1
Regulation of wu:fc23c0 by Yap1 and Wwtr1.

(A,B) wu:fc23c0 is strongly expressed throughout the notochord of sibling embryos (A) but not expressed in the posterior notochord of yap1;wwtr1 double mutant embryos. (C–E) Transgenic embryos obtained from an outcross of hemizygous HS:DN-yap or HS:CA-yap adults were heat shocked at the 4-somite stage and then grown to 18 somites. The genotype of the embryos was determined by PCR after the in situ hybridization to be either transgenic or non-transgenic control. Expression of DN-yap decreased posterior notochord wu:fc23c0 expression (D, n = 10) whereas CA-yap did not appear to alter wu:fc23c0 expression (E, n = 8) relative to control non-transgenic embryos (C).

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.009
Figure 3—figure supplement 2
Yap1 and Wwtr1 do not regulate arhgap12 and arhgap27 expression.

(A,B) arhgap12a and (C,D) arhgap27 are expressed in the presumptive epidermis at the same level in sibling and yap1;wwtr1 double mutant embryos. The yolk is blue from the prolonged development times necessary to visualize these weakly expressed transcripts.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.010
Figure 4 with 2 supplements
Enriched GO terms and Kegg Pathway for downregulated genes in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants.

Bar graphs showing the log-transformed adjusted P-values of enriched GO terms categorized under Biological Processes (A), Cellular Component (C) and Molecular Function (D), and for the Kegg Pathway (B). Number of genes in the enriched terms is shown in respective bar graphs.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.011
Figure 4—figure supplement 1
Real-time PCR (qPCR) assays validate downregulation of known Yap1/Wwtr1 target genes.

Tail buds from siblings and yap1;wwtr1 double mutants were collected in the same manner as in the RNA-seq experiment, and sample genes from Tables 1 and 2 were assessed. All genes assessed were from four biological replicates (sib: n = 4; mut: n = 4) except csrp1a (sib: n = 4; mut: n = 3). The Cq values were normalized to rpl13 and are provided in Supplementary file 2. The graphs represent mean ± s.d. P-values were calculated by one-tailed two-sample t-test and corrected for multiple hypotheses testing (FDR method). * - p<0.05; ** - p<0.01; *** - p<0.001. sib – siblings; mut – mutants. † - CABZ01115881.1.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.012
Figure 4—figure supplement 2
Morphogenetic defects in noto mutants.

Embryos from a cross of noton1 heterozygotes were sorted at the 16-somite stage when the noto phenotype first becomes visible. The same sibling and mutant embryos are photographed at all three stages shown.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.013
Alterations in the presumptive epidermis in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants.

Mutant and sibling embryos at the 24-somite stage were fixed, incubated with the anti-keratin antibodies panKr1-8 (A,B) or 79.14 (C,D), and then co-stained with DAPI. Confocal images of the midline of the tailbud, with anterior to the left. Note the thinner presumptive epidermis in the mutants compared to that in the siblings.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.015
Tp63 positive cells accumulate at the nascent fin fold in sibling but not mutant embryos.

Embryos were incubated with the anti-Tp63 antibody, and then co-stained with DAPI. (A) Embryos were collected at the indicated stages. Note the increase in Tp63-positive cells on the dorsal and ventral midline as the embryos age. (B–D) The Tp63-positive presumptive epidermis at the 18-somite stage (B) is one layer thick, but increases to multiple layers by the 24-somite stage in sibling (C) but not in yap1;wwtr1 double mutant embryos (D). Confocal images of the midline of the tailbud, with anterior to the left. The zoomed in images in panels B-D are of the dorsal side, and the arrows in the merged images point to the rare presumptive epidermis Tp63-negative cells.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.016
Dynamic movements of presumptive epidermal cells at the ventral fin fold.

(A) Cartoon showing previous analysis of dorsal fin fold formation redrawn from Dane and Tucker, 1985. (B) Stills from live imaging of ventral fin fold formation in wild-type embryos taken from Video 2. (C) Stills from live imaging of ventral fin fold formation in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants taken from Video 3. Images are of the midline with anterior to the left. Arrowheads point to new cells arriving at the midline. Most of the cells in the wild-type arrive basally, although two cells outlined appear at the edge of the fin fold coming from the other side of the embryo. Note that in wild-type embryos most cells that are at the midline at t = 0 min, or come to the midline at later times, stay at the midline whereas in the yap1;wwtr1 double mutants cells are frequently transiently at the midline (quantified in Figure 8). Lateral views of the ventral-posterior part of the embryo, with dorsal up and ventral down. Wild-type movie is a representational movie of 21 movies examined and the mutant movie is representational of 11 movies.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.017
Measurements of presumptive epidermal cells at the ventral fin fold.

(A) The time individual cells were at the midline measured in a single movie each for wild-type cells and yap1;wwtr1 double mutant cells. Embryos were positioned on their side and filmed from the left side. When mutant cells crossed over the midline to the right side of the embryo, we stopped recording them, resulting in a truncated line. Note that while it was obvious when mutant cells left the midline because the epidermis is thin in these embryos, it was not completely clear in two of the wild-type cases (asterisks) whether cells left the midline or if they were obscured by other cells in the accumulating fin fold. (B) Movement speed for presumptive epidermal wild-type cells, yap1;wwtr1 double mutant cells, and cells expressing Fn∆C, all measured at the midline. (C) Height-Length ratio of individual presumptive epidermal cells at the midline, taken at various time points during the filming of an individual movie. Height is a measurement of the apical-basal distance, and length is measured as the distance along the body axis. For both panels B and C, each column in the graph represents the average of 10 cells. *p<0.05; **p<0.01; ***p<0.001.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.018
Figure 9 with 1 supplement
Fibronectin deposition is altered in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants.

(A,B) Intersomitic Fn deposition (arrowheads) appears unaffected in sibling and mutant embryos. Lateral confocal section. (C,D) At the lateral edges of the somites, Fn is present in rosettes where the somites contact the presumptive epidermis in sibling embryos (C), whereas in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants there are gaps (arrow) and regions of enhanced Fn accumulation (arrowhead, (D). (E, F) Higher magnification views of the ventral region of a single somite near its lateral edge from sibling (E) and yap1;wwtr1 double mutant (F) embryos showing altered Fn accumulation in the mutants. Arrows point to gaps in Fn deposition. (G,H) At the midline, Fn is discontinuous underneath the presumptive epidermis in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants (arrows, (H) compared to siblings (G)). The posterior notochord Fn staining appears mostly unaffected in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants, whereas in more anterior regions the Fn staining is absent (arrowheads), unlike in the siblings. All embryos are at 18-somites with anterior to the left.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.021
Figure 9—figure supplement 1
Expression of Fn in medaka embryos.

(A) In a lateral section Fn protein is observed around the somites, including between adjacent somites, but does not appear within the somites as is also observed in zebrafish. (B) In a midline section, Fn is observed under the epidermis and around the notochord, as in zebrafish. Fn is also observed in periodic clusters along the notochord in medaka.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.022
Figure 10 with 1 supplement
Inhibition of Fibronectin activity mimics the yap1;wwtr1 double mutant phenotype.

(A–C) Control embryo (A) and embryos injected with 400 pg fn∆C mRNA (B,C). (D, E) Control (D) and fn∆C-injected (E) embryos stained with phalloidin. Note the absence of chevron-shaped somites in panel E. (F, G) Control (F) and fn∆C-injected (G) embryos incubated with the anti-Tp63 antibody and co-stained with DAPI. Note the single layer of Tp63-positive presumptive epidermal cells in panel G (n = 12/12 embryos with a shortened tail had a single layered presumptive epidermis). All embryos are at the 24-somite stage with anterior to the left.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.023
Figure 10—figure supplement 1
Movement of cells expressing Fn∆C.

(A) Stills from live imaging of ventral fin fold formation in embryos expressing Fn∆C from injected mRNA. This movie is a representational movie of one of three movies. Arrowheads show new cells entering the fin fold. (B) The time individual Fn∆C expressing cells were at the midline measured in a single movie. Compare to wild-type cells in Figure 8A. Embryos were positioned on their side and filmed from the left side. When Fn∆C cells crossed over the midline to the right side of the embryo, we stopped recording them, resulting in a truncated line.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.024
Reduced adhesion of presumptive epidermis in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants.

(A–D) Embryos were injected with mRNA encoding a membrane-localized form of GFP and imaged at the indicated stages. (A,C) Sibling embryos. (B,D) yap1;wwtr1 double mutant embryos. Note the progressive separation of the epidermis from the somites (arrows), which increases from the 16-somite to the 20-somite stage. Four of four mutant embryos at the 16-somite stage exhibited the tissue separation phenotype and three of three at the 20-somite stage.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.026
Role of Yap1/Wwtr1 in somite stage morphogenesis.

(A) Yap1 and Wwtr1 are expressed specifically in the presumptive epidermis and notochord (light blue), where they promote cell adhesion and Fn assembly (orange). These processes are essential for both the movement of presumptive epidermal cells dorsally and ventrally to form the MFF, and for force transmission of the underlying tissues to allow the elongation of the posterior body. (B) At the midline, cells are converging from either side and push against each other to form the dorsal (shown) and ventral MFFs. We propose that adhesion to Fn is required for cells to be able to create the necessary force to allow them to generate the MFF. The presomitic mesoderm is shown in red and the neural tube is green.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.027

Videos

Video 1
Comparison of sibling (left) and yap1;wwtr1 double mutant (right) embryos.

The movie begins at the 3-somite stage.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.003
Video 2
A time lapse view of the presumptive epidermal cellular migration in sibling shows an accumulation of cells at the ventral midline.

Cells can be seen changing contacts with neighbors, and new cells move in at the mesodermal/presumptive epidermal border. Images taken every 5 min for 5 hr starting at the 20-somite stage.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.019
Video 3
A time lapse view of the presumptive epidermal cellular migration in a yap1;wwtr1 double mutants shows that the cells are still migratory but are not accumulating at the ventral midline.

Cells move into plane at the midline, but continue to migrate into other z planes instead of building up to contribute to the nascent ventral MFF. Images taken every 5 min for 5 hr starting at the 20-somite stage.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.020
Video 4
A time lapse view of the presumptive epidermal cellular migration in an embryo injected with 400 pg fn∆C mRNA.

As with the yap1;wwtr1 double mutants, the presumptive epidermal cells are still migratory but are not accumulating at the ventral midline. Images taken every 5 min for 5 hr starting at the 20-somite stage.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.025

Tables

Table 1
Gene expression changes in yap1;wwtr1 double mutants
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.007
ENSEMBL gene IDENSEMBL gene nameProtein typeFold-change
(decrease)
Expression domain
ENSDARG00000088717ecrg4bAugurin51.1Presumptive epidermis*
ENSDARG00000086539CABZ01115881.1SH2D3A12.1Presumptive epidermis*
ENSDARG00000061948amotl2bAmotl11.7Presumptive epidermis*
ENSDARG00000019365zgc:110712Keratin 14/1711.1Presumptive epidermis*
ENSDARG00000056627cxcl14Chemokine (C-X-C motif)10.5Presumptive epidermis
ENSDARG00000088002wu:fc23c09Podocan8.3Notochord*
ENSDARG00000098058im:7150988GAPR-17.9Presumptive epidermis
ENSDARG00000094752rpe65bCarotenoid oxygenase7.8Presumptive epidermis*
ENSDARG00000025254s100a10bCalcium binding7.3Presumptive epidermis*
ENSDARG00000074002slc6a11aSolute carrier6.8Presumptive epidermis*
ENSDARG00000101423cyp2y3Cytochrome P4506.3Presumptive epidermis
ENSDARG00000023062cyr61CCN family ECM Protein6.3Notochord
  1. *Our data; others are from ZFIN.org

Table 2
Regulation of previously identified Yap1/Wwtr1 target genes
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.014
ENSEMBL gene IDENSEMBL gene nameProtein typeFold-change
(decrease)
Expression domain
ENSDARG00000061948amotl2bAmotl11.7Presumptive epidermis*
ENSDARG00000023062cyr61CCN family ECM Protein6.2Notochord
ENSDARG00000012066dcnDecorin4.4Presumptive epidermis
ENSDARG00000052783cdc42ep3Cdc42 Effector Protein4.1Presumptive epidermis
ENSDARG00000006603csrp1aCys and Gly Rich Protein4.0Notochord
ENSDARG00000037476sorbs3Scaffold protein3.6Presumptive epidermis
ENSDARG00000042934ctgfaCCN family ECM Protein3.5Notochord
ENSDARG00000035809col1a1bCollagen3.5Presumptive epidermis
ENSDARG00000020086nuak1aAmp-Activated Protein Kinase3.4Ventral mesoderm*
ENSDARG00000060610pcdh7bProtocadherin3.4Presumptive epidermis
  1. *Our data; others are from ZFIN.org

    From Zhao et al. (2008) and Zhang et al. (2009)

Key resources table
Reagent type (species)
or resource
DesignationSource or referenceIdentifiersAdditional information
Gene (D. rerio)yap1; wwtr1NAZFIN_ID:ZDB-GENE-030131–9710; ZFIN_ID:ZDB-GENE-051101–1
Strain, strain background ()
Genetic reagent (D. rerio)yap1[bns19];wwtr1[bns35]this paperCRISPR-mediated mutation. 41 bp deletion in exon 1. p.Ile39Argfs*72; CRISPR-mediated mutation. 29 bp insertion in exon 2. p.Pro145Glnfs*15
Genetic reagent (D. rerio) Tg(hsp70:RFP-DNyap) zf621Source: Poss lab; Reference PMID:26209644
Genetic reagent (D. rerio)Tg(hsp70:RFP-CAyap) zf622Source: Poss lab; Reference PMID: 26209644
Genetic reagent (D. rerio)noto n1Source ZIRC; Reference PMID: 7477317
Biological sample (D. rerio)NANAWhole tail from the tailbud to the third newest somite (S-III).16–18 somite-stage embryos. Tissue samples for RNA-seq and real-time qPCR.
Antibodyanti-WWTR1 (rabbit monoclonal)Cell SignalingD24E4Figure 2—figure supplement 2A 1:200; 1:100 Figure 2—figure supplement 2B,C
Antibodyanti-Yap1 (rabbit polyclonal)Cell Signaling4912Dilution 1:100
Antibodyanti-Tp63 (rabbit polyclonal)GeneTexGTX124660Dilution 1:800
Antibodyanti-Fibronectin (rabbit polyclonal)SigmaF3648Dilution 1:100
Antibodypankr1-8 (mouse monoclonal)Progen Biotechnik61006Dilution 1:10
Antibodyanti-keratin (mouse monoclonal)Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank79.14Dilution 1:10
Recombinant DNA reagentdominant-negative Fn in CS2 expression vectorthis paperA fragment of zebrafish Fn1b coding region from aa 1–630 was inserted into the CS2 vector as described in the Methods.
Recombinant DNA reagentNLS-Kikume/EGFP-CAAX in the CS2 expresion vectorthis paper

Additional files

Supplementary file 1

RNA-seq of tailbuds

Spreadsheet showing gene changes between siblings and yap1;wwtr1 double mutants.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.028
Supplementary file 2

Cq values of genes assayed by qPCR in sibling tail samples.

The Cq data for Figure 4—figure supplement 1 is shown.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.029
Supplemental file 3

Primers used to make in situ hybridization probes

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.030
Supplemental file 4

Primers for qPCR

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.031
Transparent reporting form
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065.032

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  1. David Kimelman
  2. Natalie L Smith
  3. Jason Kuan Han Lai
  4. Didier YR Stainier
(2017)
Regulation of posterior body and epidermal morphogenesis in zebrafish by localized Yap1 and Wwtr1
eLife 6:e31065.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31065