H. Steinbeisser et al., THE ROLE OF GSC AND BMP-4 IN DORSAL-VENTRAL PATTERNING OF THE MARGINAL ZONE IN XENOPUS - A LOSS-OF-FUNCTION STUDY USING ANTISENSE RNA, EMBO journal, 14(21), 1995, pp. 5230-5243
The dorsal-specific homeobox gene goosecoid (gsc) and the bone morphog
enetic protein 4 gene (BMP-4) are expressed in complementary regions o
f the Xenopus gastrula, Injection of gsc mRNA dorsalizes ventral mesod
ermal tissue and can induce axis formation in normal and UV-ventralize
d embryos, On the other hand, BMP-Q mRNA injection, which has a strong
ventralizing effect on whole embryos, has been implicated in ventrali
zation by UV, and can rescue tail structures in embryos dorsalized by
LiCl, The above-mentioned putative roles for BMP-I and gsc are based o
n gain-of-function experiments, In order to determine the in vivo role
of these two genes in the patterning of the Xenopus mesoderm during g
astrulation, partial loss-of-function experiments were performed using
antisense RNA injections, Using marker genes that are expressed early
in gastrulation, we show that antisense gsc RNA has a ventralizing ef
fect on embryos, whereas antisense BMP-I RNA dorsalizes mesodermal tis
sue, These loss-of-function studies also show a requirement for gsc an
d BMP-4 in the dorsalization induced by LiCl and in the ventralization
generated by UV irradiation, respectively, Thus, both gain- and loss-
of-function results for gsc and BMP-I support the view that these two
genes are necessary components of the dorsal and ventral patterning pa
thways in Xenopus embryos.