In a groundbreaking study that reshapes our understanding of early animal development, researchers have unveiled the pivotal roles of β-catenin and TGFβ–SMAD2/3 signaling pathways in the embryonic organizer function of the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi. This discovery not only uncovers mechanistic details about how body axes are patterned in one of the earliest-diverging animal lineages but also links ctenophore development with that of more complex metazoans, hinting at deep evolutionary conservations.
The embryonic organizer region, a critical signaling center responsible for orchestrating body plan patterning, has been extensively studied in bilaterian animals such as amphibians and mammals. However, the existence and molecular underpinnings of such organizers in basal animal groups like ctenophores have long remained elusive. This study rigorously demonstrates that the establishment and function of the Mnemiopsis organizer rely on the cooperative action of intracellular β-catenin and extracellular TGFβ–SMAD2/3 pathways, which jointly induce the formation of oral structures essential for primary axis specification.
Through elegant transplantation experiments, the authors showed that when the embryonic organizer from Mnemiopsis embryos is grafted ectopically, it induces a secondary pharynx formation indicative of successful organizer activity. Crucially, this induction process was significantly impaired when embryos were treated with small-molecule inhibitors targeting either β-catenin signaling (iCRT14) or the TGFβ–SMAD2/3 cascade (SB431542), compared to controls treated with DMSO. These pharmacological manipulations establish that both pathways are indispensable for organizer-mediated axial patterning.
A particularly striking aspect of the findings is that organizer induction was sensitive not only in Mnemiopsis leucocytes but also conserved across species boundaries. Transplantation of Mnemiopsis organizer tissue into gastrulae of the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis elicited ectopic expression of NvFoxA, a transcription factor hallmarking oral fate, and this cross-phylum induction was similarly abolished by TGFβ–SMAD2/3 pathway inhibition. This interspecies grafting experiment underscores the functional conservation of organizer signaling components across ancient metazoan lineages.
While β-catenin has been previously implicated in axis formation in Nematostella, the newly defined necessity of TGFβ–SMAD2/3 signaling in organizer function extends current paradigms. The study’s data indicate that the TGFβ–SMAD2/3 pathway acts as a secreted ligand-based mediator, while β-catenin operates intracellularly to convey patterning signals, affirming their complementary roles in embryonic induction.
The researchers investigated whether WNT ligand signaling contributes to these early developmental events in Mnemiopsis, given the centrality of WNT/β-catenin interactions in many organisms. Intriguingly, although the manganese Mnemiopsis genome encodes four Wnt genes, none are expressed at the gastrula blastopore or mouth regions where organizer activity is localized. Instead, RNA sequencing identified only two WNT ligands, MlWntX and MlWnt6, present in pre-gastrulation embryos, yet functional assays revealed that overexpression of only MlWntA could induce ectopic axes—and even this effect was low-frequency and observed only in the sea anemone model.
This discrepancy points toward a WNT-ligand-independent activation of β-catenin in Mnemiopsis early development, signifying an ancient and alternate regulatory mechanism. Maternal β-catenin appears to constitute an intrinsic driver of signaling cascades initiating the oral-aboral axis, paralleling observations in vertebrate systems such as zebrafish and Xenopus, where β-catenin activation occurs prior to or independently of canonical WNT ligand involvement.
The implications of these results are profound for evolutionary developmental biology. They suggest that the molecular framework underlying organizer activity—comprising β-catenin and TGFβ–SMAD2/3 signaling—emerged early in metazoan evolution and was maintained across divergent animal phyla. This pioneering work provides a foundation to explore how these ancient signaling networks were co-opted and modified to produce the extraordinary diversity of body plans observed today.
Moreover, this study advances our mechanistic understanding of the ctenophore embryonic organizer, a relatively obscure yet critical structure for proper axial patterning. It highlights the sophisticated interplay between intracellular mediators and extracellular signals that shape embryonic development, emphasizing that even in basal animals, organizer functions hinge upon conserved canonical pathways.
Future research will now be poised to decipher the identity of the secreted TGFβ ligands driving SMAD2/3 activation and to clarify how intrinsic β-catenin activation is regulated in the absence of typical WNT ligands. Additionally, the evolutionary origins and molecular evolution of these pathways across non-bilaterian animals stand as enticing fields of inquiry.
In sum, this work not only demystifies the molecular determinants of the Mnemiopsis embryonic organizer but also bridges developmental principles from ctenophores to cnidarians, further embedding these early-diverging metazoans in the broader narrative of animal form generation. It exemplifies how integrative approaches employing transplantation assays, pharmacological inhibition, and cross-species analyses can unravel ancient developmental mechanisms that sculpt life’s diversity.
Subject of Research: Embryonic organizer function and signaling pathways in the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi and comparative analyses with Nematostella vectensis.
Article Title: A blastoporal organizer in a ctenophore.
Article References:
Kremnyov, S., Lebedeva, T., Genikhovich, G. et al. A blastoporal organizer in a ctenophore. Nature (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10643-z
Image Credits: AI Generated
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10643-z
Keywords: embryonic organizer, β-catenin, TGFβ–SMAD2/3 signaling, Mnemiopsis leidyi, ctenophore development, axis specification, WNT signaling, early metazoan evolution.
Tags: basal animal lineage signaling pathwaysbody axis patterning in ctenophoresctenophore embryonic developmentearly animal evolution mechanismsembryonic organizer functionmetazoan developmental conservationsMnemiopsis leidyi developmentoral structure formation in ctenophoressecondary pharynx inductionsmall-molecule inhibitors in embryogenesisTGFβ–SMAD2/3 signalingβ-catenin signaling pathway



