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Integrative and Comparative Biology Advance Access originally published online on July 14, 2006
Integrative and Comparative Biology 2006 46(6):760-776; doi:10.1093/icb/icl015
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology. All rights reserved. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

The effect of larval age on morphology and gene expression during ascidian metamorphosis

Molly W. Jacobs1,*, Sandie M. Degnan{dagger}, Rick Woods{ddagger}, Elizabeth Williams{dagger}, Kathrein E. Roper{dagger},{ddagger}, Kathryn Green{dagger} and Bernard M. Degnan{dagger}
* Friday Harbor Laboratories, University of Washington 620 University Road, Friday Harbor, WA 98250, USA
{dagger} Department of Integrative Biology, University of Queensland Brisbane 4072, Australia
{ddagger} The Queensland Institute of Medical Research PO Royal Brisbane Hospital, Herston, Brisbane 4029, Australia

Correspondence: 1E-mail: mwjacobs{at}u.washington.edu

Metamorphosis is both an ecological and a developmental genetic transition that an organism undergoes as a normal part of ontogeny. Many organisms have the ability to delay metamorphosis when conditions are unsuitable. This strategy carries obvious benefits, but may also result in severe consequences for older larvae that run low on energy. In the marine environment, some lecithotrophic larvae that have prolonged periods in the plankton may begin forming postlarval and juvenile structures that normally do not appear until after settlement and the initiation of metamorphosis. This precocious activation of the postlarval developmental program may reflect an adaptation to increase the survival of older, energy-depleted larvae by allowing them to metamorphose more quickly. In the present study, we investigate morphological and genetic consequences of delay of metamorphosis in larvae of Herdmania momus (a solitary stolidobranch ascidian). We observe significant morphological and genetic changes during prolonged larval life, with older larvae displaying significant changes in RNA levels, precocious migration of mesenchyme cells, and changes in larval shape including shortening of the tail. While these observations suggest that the older H. momus larvae are functionally different from younger larvae and possibly becoming more predisposed to undergo metamorphosis, we did not find any significant differences in gene expression levels between postlarvae arising from larvae that metamorphosed as soon as they were competent and postlarvae developing from larvae that postponed metamorphosis. This recalibration, or convergence, of transcript levels in the early postlarva suggests that changes that occur during prolonged larval life of H. momus are not necessarily associated with early activation of adult organ differentiation. Instead, it suggests that an autonomous developmental program is activated in H. momus upon the induction of metamorphosis regardless of the history of the larva.


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