Left-right asymmetry in Hawaiian 'Looking-glass' snails

Lead Research Organisation: University of Nottingham
Department Name: Sch of Biosciences

Abstract

While most animal bodies are bilaterally symmetric on the outside, the internal organs usually show a consistent left-right (LR) asymmetry. Defining this LR asymmetry is a critical part of early development, such that left/right positional errors are an important class of human birth defect, and in later life numerous diseases affect apparently symmetric organs in an asymmetric fashion. Yet, in trying to understand how this LR asymmetry is established, it is straightforward to conceive how the LR axis is defined relative to front/back and top/bottom, but more difficult to comprehend how left and right are consistently orientated in the same direction. In the classic view, the solution is that LR asymmetry is signalled by a chiral structure, the fabled "F-molecule", which is directionally orientated relative to the other axes.

To date, a wealth of studies have revealed the genes that promote the propagation of asymmetric signals, but the earliest LR symmetry-breaking events are not clear. In seeking to understand if there is a common pathway, an emerging consensus is that LR asymmetry in diverse organisms originates from the cytoskeletal dynamics that underlie the asymmetric behaviour of individual cells Nonetheless, a central problem remains - how and why are left and right consistently orientated in the same direction? The main approach to understanding this invariance has been to use rare mutants or manipulations in model animals (vertebrates, nematode/fly), to create individuals that are partly or wholly orientated in the opposite direction. This methodology has been fruitful, of course, but unfortunately, scientists have largely ignored the only animal group - snails - in which ordinary development can produce individuals that are LR orientated in different directions. Studies of LR asymmetry ("chirality") in snails may be key to understanding how and why are left and right consistently orientated in the same direction in nearly all other animals. In this project, we propose to use association mapping and long read genome sequencing to identify the gene that underpins natural variation in the LR asymmetry of Hawaiian snails of the genus Lymnaea and/or Auricullela. This knowledge will then be used to understand how molecular chirality defines the LR asymmetry of cells, organs and bodies, with implications for understanding human health and development. The project will involve cutting-edge methods in DNA sequencing/bioinformatics, and may also require field or lab work in Hawaii.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
BB/T008369/1 01/10/2020 30/09/2028
2594450 Studentship BB/T008369/1 01/10/2021 30/09/2025