Developmental transcriptome of Aplysia californica.
Genome-wide transcriptional changes in development provide important
insight into mechanisms underlying growth, differentiation, and
patterning. However, such large-scale developmental studies have been
limited to a few representatives of Ecdysozoans and Chordates. Here, we
characterize transcriptomes of embryonic, larval, and metamorphic
development in the marine mollusc Aplysia californica and reveal novel
molecular components associated with life history transitions.
Specifically, we identify more than 20 signal peptides, putative
hormones, and transcription factors in association with early
development and metamorphic stages-many of which seem to be
evolutionarily conserved elements of signal transduction pathways. We
also characterize genes related to biomineralization-a critical process
of molluscan development. In summary, our experiment provides the first
large-scale survey of gene expression in mollusc development, and
complements previous studies on the regulatory mechanisms underlying
body plan patterning and the formation of larval and juvenile
structures. This study serves as a resource for further functional
annotation of transcripts and genes in Aplysia, specifically and
molluscs in general. A comparison of the Aplysia developmental
transcriptome with similar studies in the zebra fish Danio rerio, the
fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans,
and other studies on molluscs suggests an overall highly divergent
pattern of gene regulatory mechanisms that are likely a consequence of
the different developmental modes of these organisms.