DataSheet2_Diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: Insights from the Atlantic salmon and European eel.PDF

Habenulae asymmetries are widespread across vertebrates and analyses in zebrafish, the reference model organism for this process, have provided insight into their molecular nature, their mechanisms of formation and their important roles in the integration of environmental and internal cues with a va...

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Main Authors: Léo Michel, Karina Palma, Mauricio Cerda, Ronan Lagadec, Hélène Mayeur, Michaël Fuentès, Laurence Besseau, Patrick Martin, Elodie Magnanou, Patrick Blader, Miguel L. Concha, Sylvie Mazan
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.1015074.s007
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet2_Diversification_of_habenular_organization_and_asymmetries_in_teleosts_Insights_from_the_Atlantic_salmon_and_European_eel_PDF/21484236
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/21484236 2024-09-15T17:55:50+00:00 DataSheet2_Diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: Insights from the Atlantic salmon and European eel.PDF Léo Michel Karina Palma Mauricio Cerda Ronan Lagadec Hélène Mayeur Michaël Fuentès Laurence Besseau Patrick Martin Elodie Magnanou Patrick Blader Miguel L. Concha Sylvie Mazan 2022-11-03T05:17:24Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.1015074.s007 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet2_Diversification_of_habenular_organization_and_asymmetries_in_teleosts_Insights_from_the_Atlantic_salmon_and_European_eel_PDF/21484236 unknown doi:10.3389/fcell.2022.1015074.s007 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet2_Diversification_of_habenular_organization_and_asymmetries_in_teleosts_Insights_from_the_Atlantic_salmon_and_European_eel_PDF/21484236 CC BY 4.0 Cell Biology Marine Biology Cell Development Proliferation and Death Cell Metabolism Cell Neurochemistry Cellular Interactions (incl. Adhesion Matrix Cell Wall) habenula asymmetry Atlantic salmon European eel pax6 sox1 Dataset 2022 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.1015074.s007 2024-08-19T06:20:00Z Habenulae asymmetries are widespread across vertebrates and analyses in zebrafish, the reference model organism for this process, have provided insight into their molecular nature, their mechanisms of formation and their important roles in the integration of environmental and internal cues with a variety of organismal adaptive responses. However, the generality of the characteristics identified in this species remains an open question, even on a relatively short evolutionary scale, in teleosts. To address this question, we have characterized the broad organization of habenulae in the Atlantic salmon and quantified the asymmetries in each of the identified subdomains. Our results show that a highly conserved partitioning into a dorsal and a ventral component is retained in the Atlantic salmon and that asymmetries are mainly observed in the former as in zebrafish. A remarkable difference is that a prominent left-restricted pax6 positive nucleus is observed in the Atlantic salmon, but undetectable in zebrafish. This nucleus is not observed outside teleosts, and harbors a complex presence/absence pattern in this group, retaining its location and cytoarchitectonic organization in an elopomorph, the European eel. These findings suggest an ancient origin and high evolvability of this trait in the taxon. Taken together, our data raise novel questions about the variability of asymmetries across teleosts and their biological significance depending on ecological contexts. Dataset Atlantic salmon European eel Frontiers: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Cell Biology
Marine Biology
Cell Development
Proliferation and Death
Cell Metabolism
Cell Neurochemistry
Cellular Interactions (incl. Adhesion
Matrix
Cell Wall)
habenula
asymmetry
Atlantic salmon
European eel
pax6
sox1
spellingShingle Cell Biology
Marine Biology
Cell Development
Proliferation and Death
Cell Metabolism
Cell Neurochemistry
Cellular Interactions (incl. Adhesion
Matrix
Cell Wall)
habenula
asymmetry
Atlantic salmon
European eel
pax6
sox1
Léo Michel
Karina Palma
Mauricio Cerda
Ronan Lagadec
Hélène Mayeur
Michaël Fuentès
Laurence Besseau
Patrick Martin
Elodie Magnanou
Patrick Blader
Miguel L. Concha
Sylvie Mazan
DataSheet2_Diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: Insights from the Atlantic salmon and European eel.PDF
topic_facet Cell Biology
Marine Biology
Cell Development
Proliferation and Death
Cell Metabolism
Cell Neurochemistry
Cellular Interactions (incl. Adhesion
Matrix
Cell Wall)
habenula
asymmetry
Atlantic salmon
European eel
pax6
sox1
description Habenulae asymmetries are widespread across vertebrates and analyses in zebrafish, the reference model organism for this process, have provided insight into their molecular nature, their mechanisms of formation and their important roles in the integration of environmental and internal cues with a variety of organismal adaptive responses. However, the generality of the characteristics identified in this species remains an open question, even on a relatively short evolutionary scale, in teleosts. To address this question, we have characterized the broad organization of habenulae in the Atlantic salmon and quantified the asymmetries in each of the identified subdomains. Our results show that a highly conserved partitioning into a dorsal and a ventral component is retained in the Atlantic salmon and that asymmetries are mainly observed in the former as in zebrafish. A remarkable difference is that a prominent left-restricted pax6 positive nucleus is observed in the Atlantic salmon, but undetectable in zebrafish. This nucleus is not observed outside teleosts, and harbors a complex presence/absence pattern in this group, retaining its location and cytoarchitectonic organization in an elopomorph, the European eel. These findings suggest an ancient origin and high evolvability of this trait in the taxon. Taken together, our data raise novel questions about the variability of asymmetries across teleosts and their biological significance depending on ecological contexts.
format Dataset
author Léo Michel
Karina Palma
Mauricio Cerda
Ronan Lagadec
Hélène Mayeur
Michaël Fuentès
Laurence Besseau
Patrick Martin
Elodie Magnanou
Patrick Blader
Miguel L. Concha
Sylvie Mazan
author_facet Léo Michel
Karina Palma
Mauricio Cerda
Ronan Lagadec
Hélène Mayeur
Michaël Fuentès
Laurence Besseau
Patrick Martin
Elodie Magnanou
Patrick Blader
Miguel L. Concha
Sylvie Mazan
author_sort Léo Michel
title DataSheet2_Diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: Insights from the Atlantic salmon and European eel.PDF
title_short DataSheet2_Diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: Insights from the Atlantic salmon and European eel.PDF
title_full DataSheet2_Diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: Insights from the Atlantic salmon and European eel.PDF
title_fullStr DataSheet2_Diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: Insights from the Atlantic salmon and European eel.PDF
title_full_unstemmed DataSheet2_Diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: Insights from the Atlantic salmon and European eel.PDF
title_sort datasheet2_diversification of habenular organization and asymmetries in teleosts: insights from the atlantic salmon and european eel.pdf
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.1015074.s007
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet2_Diversification_of_habenular_organization_and_asymmetries_in_teleosts_Insights_from_the_Atlantic_salmon_and_European_eel_PDF/21484236
genre Atlantic salmon
European eel
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
European eel
op_relation doi:10.3389/fcell.2022.1015074.s007
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/DataSheet2_Diversification_of_habenular_organization_and_asymmetries_in_teleosts_Insights_from_the_Atlantic_salmon_and_European_eel_PDF/21484236
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.1015074.s007
_version_ 1810432060391686144