eLife (Mar 2015)

An organismal perspective on C. intestinalis development, origins and diversification

  • Matthew J Kourakis,
  • William C Smith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.06024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

Read online

The ascidian Ciona intestinalis, commonly known as a ‘sea squirt’, has become an important model for embryological studies, offering a simple blueprint for chordate development. As a model organism, it offers the following: a small, compact genome; a free swimming larva with only about 2600 cells; and an embryogenesis that unfolds according to a predictable program of cell division. Moreover, recent phylogenies reveal that C. intestinalis occupies a privileged branch in the tree of life: it is our nearest invertebrate relative. Here, we provide an organismal perspective of C. intestinalis, highlighting aspects of its life history and habitat—from its brief journey as a larva to its radical metamorphosis into adult form—and relate these features to its utility as a laboratory model.

Keywords