Bryozoa (Ectoprocta) is a monophyletic group of sessile, colonial invertebrates and includes over 6,000 species in aquatic habitats worldwide [
1]. Bryozoan life history, reproduction and anatomy are so fundamentally different from other metazoan groups (for example they lack typical circulatory structures or nephridia and the nervous systems of larvae and adults are unique), that traditional morphological investigations and the fossil record failed to clarify their evolutionary history. Bryozoa belong to Lophotrochozoa [
2], but their phylogenetic position within the group is still ambiguous [
3-
6]. Recently, a few molecular studies indicated a close relationship of bryozoans with the clade Entoprocta + Cycliophora, but with low support [
7,
8]. Within Bryozoa, three major clades are recognized, Gymnolaemata (Eurystomata), Stenolaemata (Cyclostomata), and Phylactolaemata, but the phylogenetic interrelationships of these groups remain controversial [
9-
11].
Bryozoans have indirect development and their life cycle includes a sexually produced larval stage as well as asexual reproduction by cloning to give rise to colonial adult forms [
12]. The most species rich bryozoan clade with over 5,000 species, the Gymnolaemata, has evolved a fascinating diversity of reproductive mechanisms and larval forms. Less than 20 species release their eggs directly into the surrounding water, where they develop into the well known cyphonautes larvae, planktotrophic (feeding) larvae with characteristic shells. Even fewer species produce shelled larvae with a non-functioning gut called pseudocyphonautes. The great majority of gymnolaemates, however, have evolved brood protection and their embryos develop into lecitotrophic (non-feeding) "coronate" larvae. Coronate larvae usually lack both a shell and a gut, but traces of a non-functioning gut were observed in some species, which was interpreted as a vestigial gut [
13,
14]. Despite the above outlined differences among gymnolaemate larvae, they usually share a set of morphological characters including transitory larval structures such as larval muscles and nerves (such as an apical organ), a glandulo-sensory organ (pyriform organ), internal cells, as well as blastemic cells that give rise to definitive adult tissues [
14]. During a drastic metamorphosis, the transitory larval structures are discarded and only a single species is known to retain its larval gut in the adult [
15]. Typically, all adult structures (for example gut, nervous system) are built
de novo from the blastemic cells, which are found in various positions in the larvae and can give rise to different adult structures during metamorphosis in individual gymnolaemate species [
16,
17]. However, some authors propose that only ectodermal and mesodermal cells are involved in adult body plan formation from the larva, and this process mirrors the asexual budding process, which involves proliferation of the polypide (gut and lophophore) from the pluripotent body wall [
12,
14,
18,
19].
A comprehensive cell fate map does not exist for any species of bryozoan, so it is unknown if the blastemic cells in the larvae are undifferentiated, pluri- or multipotent set-aside/stem cells, or if these cells are determined for their future fate in the adult. To help to clarify the question to what extent the adult tissues are already determined in the larval stage, we investigated the spatial expression of 13 developmental genes in the newly released, coronate larvae of the gymnolaemate bryozoan Bugula neritina. This species is one of the better-studied bryozoans with respect to larval morphology and metamorphosis, although many details are still lacking. This initial set of genes was chosen according to the specific expression of genes in certain metazoan germ layers or organs as well as their putative conserved functions in the development among taxa, and represents a foundation for future molecular studies. Amongst the investigated genes, Tropomyosin is known to be a general marker of bilaterian musculature; the genes Hox4, SoxB2, SoxE and FoxB have functions in neural development; the genes FoxA, GATA456 and Cdx (Caudal) have been shown to be involved in gut patterning among taxa; expression of GATA123 and BAMBI was observed in the ectoderm of metazoans, and Wnt genes have been shown to be involved in multiple events including axial patterning (see Discussion). Genes engaged in bilaterian gut formation were investigated to determine if there is any molecular indication for a larval gut being present as anlage of the adult gut in B. neritina. We discuss the gene expression patterns of the bryozoan larval stage in the light of available data for other metazoans.