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1.
Adhesive extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules appear to play roles in the migration of neural crest cells, and may also provide cues for differentiation of these cells into a variety of phenotypes. We are studying the influences of specific ECM components on crest differentiation at the levels of both individual cells and cell populations. We report here that the glycoproteins fibronectin and laminin differentially affect melanogenesis in cultures of avian neural crest-derived cells. Clusters of neural crest cells were allowed to form on explanted neural tubes for 24 and 48 hr, and then subcultured on uncoated glass coverslips or coverslips coated with fibronectin or laminin. The morphology of cells varied on the three substrata, as did patterns of cell dispersal. Crest cells dispersed most rapidly and extensively on fibronectin. In contrast, cells on laminin dispersed initially, but then assumed a stellate morphology and rapidly formed small aggregates. Cell dispersal was minimal on glass substrata, resulting in a uniformly dense distribution. These patterns of dispersal were similar in subcultures of both 24- and 48-hr clusters, although dispersal of cells from older clusters was less extensive. The rate and extent of melanogenesis correlated with patterns of cell dispersal. Cell from 24-hr clusters underwent melanogenesis significantly more slowly on fibronectin than on the other two substrata. Pigment cells began to differentiate by 2 days of subculture in the cell aggregates on laminin and in the dense centers of cultures on untreated glass. By 5 days, there was significantly more melanogenesis in cultures on laminin and glass than on fibronectin substrata. Melanogenesis in cultures of 48-hr clusters was more rapid and extensive on control (glass) substrata than on fibronectin or laminin, correlating with reduced cell dispersal. We conclude that fibronectin and laminin, which are found along neural crest migratory pathways in vivo, can affect melanogenesis in vitro by regulating patterns of cell dispersal.  相似文献   

2.
We have examined the possibility that proteases such as plasminogen activator (PA) contribute to the extraordinary motile capability of neural crest cells. We show that trunk neural crest cells that migrate from isolated neural tubes in vitro produce PA and that the level of cell-associated PA increases dramatically after 8 days in culture. This increase is not the result of differentiation or time in culture, because neural crest cell clusters that form on top of the neural tube and differentiate into pigment cells but are immotile produce very low levels of PA. If these clusters are removed from the neural tube and replated on a plastic substratum where they migrate, the level of PA associated with the cells increases dramatically, suggesting that PA production is associated with motility. Inhibitors of PA/plasmin activity significantly reduce neural crest cell motility in vitro, further supporting the idea that proteases are important in neural crest cell migration.  相似文献   

3.
M Satoh  H Ide 《Developmental biology》1987,119(2):579-586
Quail neural crest cells were treated in vitro with alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) or dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP) plus theophylline. These treatments increased the proportion of melanocytes to total cells in crest cell outgrowth cultures. Pigmentation of neural crest cell clusters proceeded more rapidly when cultures were treated with alpha-MSH or dbcAMP plus theophylline than when untreated. In clonal cell cultures, the proportion of pigmented colonies to total colonies was increased by MSH treatment. From these results, MSH seems not only to accelerate melanogenic differentiation but also to affect the state of commitment of neural crest cells to melanogenic differentiation in vitro, and this action of MSH appears to be mediated by cAMP.  相似文献   

4.
To see whether phenylalanine serves as a substrate in melanogenesis, hanging drop explants of neural crest from amphibian (Ambystoma maculatum and A. mexicanum) embryos were subjected on the seventh day in vitro to treatment with phenylalanine-3H and studied by means of light microscopic radioautography. All melanin-containing cells showed label. On the other hand, when puromycin, an inhibitor of protein synthesis, together with the labeled amino acid was administered to the cultures, no radioactivity was incorporated by pigmented cells. Comparable results were obtained when leucine was substituted for phenylalanine. In control experiments, puromycin and labeled tyrosine or 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA), both known precursors for melanin synthesis, were administered to the neural crest cultures. In these experiments, puromycin had no effect on the incorporation of label by pigmented cells. Our data strongly indicate that in differentiating amphibian melanocytes with functional pigment-forming systems, phenylalanine is used in protein synthesis, but does not serve as a substrate for the tyrosine-tyrosinase system.In another series of experiments, explants of neuroepithelium (neural crest anlage) were grown from the time of explantation to the seventh day in vitro in the presence of phenyllactic acid, an analog of phenylalanine. Pigment cells developed normally.These results suggest that phenylalanine plays little or no role in pigment cell differentiation.  相似文献   

5.
The Steel mutation is a non-cell-autonomous defect in mice that affects the development of several stem cell populations, including germ cells, hematopoietic cells, and neural crest-derived pigment cells. To characterize the environmental lesion caused by the Steel mutation, we have compared the ability of normal and mutant extracellular matrix material to support the differentiation of normal mouse neural crest cells in vitro. Extracellular matrix deposited by cultured skin cells isolated from normal fetuses enhanced melanogenesis by crest cells over that observed on plastic substrata. In contrast, matrix material produced by Steel-Dickie (Sld) fetal skin cells failed to enhance melanogenesis. Adrenergic differentiation by neural crest-derived cells was promoted equally by both normal and mutant extracellular matrix compared to control substrata. We conclude that the environmental defect in mutant embryos selectively affects a melanogenic subpopulation of neural crest cells and resides, at least in part, in the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

6.
Neuronal differentiation of mouse neural crest cells in vitro   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The purpose of the present study is to analyze the effect of serum or chick embryo extract (CEE) on the neuronal differentiation of the mouse neural crest cells. When the crest cells were cultured in the medium containing serum at low concentration (5% calf serum), neurite outgrowth was observed. The active outgrowth was detected at 3-4 days in culture. However, in the medium supplemented with 20% calf serum, no neurite appeared, and the crest cells remained fibroblast-like. The differentiation of adrenergic neurons was observed when the crest cells were cultured in the medium containing CEE along with serum.  相似文献   

7.
The precise migration of neural crest cells is apparently controlled by their environment. We have examined whether the embryonic tissue spaces in which crest cells normally migrate are sufficient to account for the pattern of crest cell distribution and whether other migratory cells could also distribute themselves along these pathways. To this end, we grafted a variety of cell types into the initial crest cell migratory pathway in chicken embryos. These cell types included (a) undifferentiated neural crest cells isolated from cultured neural tubes, intact crest from cranial neural folds, and crest derivatives (pigment cells and spinal ganglia); (b) normal embryonic fibroblastic cells from somite, limb bud, lateral plate, and heart ventricle; and (c) a transformed fibroblastic cell line (Sarcoma 180). Crest cells or their derivatives grafted into the crest migratory pathway all distributed normally, although in contrast to the result when neural tubes were graftedin situ, fewer cells were observed in the epithelium and few or none were localized in the nascent spinal ganglia. Grafted quail somite cells contributed to normal somitic structures and did not migrate extensively in the chicken host. Other fibroblasts did not migrate along cranial or trunk crest pathways, or invade adjacent tissues, but remained intact at the graft site. Sarcoma 180 cells, however, distributed themselves along the normal trunk crest pathway. Cranial and trunk crest cells and crest derivatives grafted ectopically in the limb bud or somite also dispersed, and were found along the ventral migratory pathway. Fibroblastic cells grafted into ectopic sites again remained intact and did not invade host tissue. We conclude (1) that neural crest cells and their derivatives are highly motile and invasive in their normal pathway, as well as in unfamiliar embryonic environments; and (2) that the crest pathway does not act solely to direct neural crest cells, since at least one transformed cell can follow the crest migratory route.  相似文献   

8.
Neural crest cell differentiation is responsive to a variety of extrinsic signals that include extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules and growth factors. Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) has diverse, cell type-specific effects, many of which involve regulation of synthesis of ECM molecules and their cell surface receptors. We are studying both separate and potentially interrelated influences of ECM and growth factors on crest differentiation and report here that TGF-beta alters several aspects of crest cell behavior in vitro. Clusters of quail neural crest cells were cultured in the presence and absence of 400 pM TGF-beta 1 and examined at 1, 3, and 5 days. When examined at 5 days, there was a dramatic decrease in the number of melanocytes in treated cultures, regardless of the onset or duration of TGF-beta treatment. With continuous TGF-beta treatment, or with treatment only during crest cluster formation on explanted neural tubes, many cells increased in area, becoming extremely flat. These changes were evident beginning on Day 3. While quantitative analyses of video images documented the size increase, several aspects of motility were relatively unchanged. Synthesis of fibronectin (FN) by approximately 11% of cells on Day 3 and 31% of cells on Day 5 was demonstrated by immunocytochemistry and was associated with a sixfold increase in FN mRNA by Day 5. Experiments which correlated FN immunoreactivity with incorporation of bromodeoxyuridine suggested that the population of large, flat, FN-positive cells did not proliferate selectively and that there was a slower rate of proliferation in TGF-beta-treated cultures than in untreated cultures. The large FN-immunoreactive cells resemble cells derived from cephalic neural crest and raise interesting questions concerning potential roles for TGF-beta in regulating crest differentiation in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
The trunk neural crest originates by transformation of dorsal neuroepithelial cells into mesenchymal cells that migrate into embryonic interstices. Fibronectin (FN) is thought to be essential for the process, although other extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules are potentially important. We have examined the ability of three dimensional (3D) ECM to promote crest formation in vitro. Neural tubes from stage 12 chick embryos were suspended within gelling solutions of either basement membrane (BM) components or rat tail collagen, and the extent of crest outgrowth was measured after 22 hr. Fetal calf serum inhibits outgrowth in both gels and was not used unless specified. Neither BM gel nor collagen gel contains fibronectin. Extensive crest migration occurs into the BM gel, whereas outgrowth is less in rat tail collagen. Addition of fibronectin or embryo extract (EE), which is rich in fibronectin, does not increase the extent of neural crest outgrowth in BM, which is already maximal, but does stimulate migration into collagen gel. Removal of FN from EE with gelatin-Sepharose does not remove the ability of EE to stimulate migration. Endogenous FN is localized by immunofluorescence to the basal surface of cultured neural tubes, but is not seen in the proximity of migrating neural crest cells. Addition of the FN cell-binding hexapeptide GRGDSP does not affect migration into either the BM gel or the collagen gel with EE, although it does block spreading on FN-coated plastic. Thus, although crest cells appear to use exogenous fibronectin to migrate on planar substrata in vitro, they can interact with 3D collagenous matrices in the absence of exogenous or endogenous fibronectin. In BM gels, the laminin cell-binding peptide, YIGSR, completely inhibits migration of crest away from the neural tube, suggesting that laminin is the migratory substratum. Indeed, laminin as well as collagen and fibronectin is present in the embryonic ECM. Thus, it is possible that ECM molecules in addition to or instead of fibronectin may serve as migratory substrata for neural crest in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
The in vitro differentiation of quail neural crest cells into serotoninergic neurons is reported. Serotoninergic neurons were identified by two independent methods, formaldehyde-induced histofluorescence and indirect staining with antiserotonin antibodies. Serotonin-positive cells first appeared on the third day in culture, simultaneously, or slightly prior to the first pigmented cells and adrenergic neurons. Comparable numbers of serotoninergic cells were found in crest cell cultures derived from vagal, thoracic/upper lumbar, and lumbosacral levels of the neuraxis. The neural crest origin of the serotonin neurons was further corroborated by the demonstration that cultures of somites, notochords, and neural tubes (three tissues adjacent to the neural crest and thus the most likely contaminants of crest cell cultures) did not contain serotonin-producing cells, and that mast cells were absent in crest cell cultures. The identification of serotoninergic neurons in quail neural crest cell cultures makes an important addition to the number of neural crest derivatives that are capable of differentiating in culture. Furthermore, it suggests that the in vitro culture system will prove a valid approach to the elucidation of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that govern neural crest cell differentiation.  相似文献   

11.
Neural tubes were explanted from the trunk of various embryonic stages of three teleost fish, Xiphophorus maculatus (platyfish), X. helleri (swordtail), and Oryzias latipes (Japanese medaka) with the aim to obtain in vitro differentiating neural crest cells. Outgrowth of cells was observed immediately after attachment of the explants on dishes coated with fibronectin. The outgrowing cells stained with the HNK-1 monoclonal antibody indicating that they were neural crest cells. Maximum cell outgrowth was obtained from explants of stage 9 of Xiphophorus and 19 of medaka, i.e., from stages characteristic of maximal neural crest cell segregation, and by the use of Leibovitz's (L-15) medium supplemented with 20% FBS. In this medium cells survived for more than two weeks; M199 also gave satisfactory results but DMEM allowed only poor cell growth and survival. Neuronal cells could be observed in all cultures after 48 hr, in some medaka cultures these cells were mixed with pigment cells but homogeneous pigment cell cultures were also observed. This in vitro system will be invaluable for the study of the developmental potential of fish neural crest cells and the contributions of extrinsic factors in neural crest cell fate.  相似文献   

12.
Chick trunk neural tubes containing neural crest cells were cultured in vitro. Cell outgrowth from these neural tube explants consists primarily of a small stellate cell population. After 3 days in culture the small stellate cell population undergoes a remarkable change in morphology that is characterized by a more refractile appearance in the phase contrast microscope. Subsequent to this change in morphology, pigment granules become visible in the cytoplasm after 4 days in culture. After 6 days in culture, virtually all of the small stellate cells are pigmented. The cell cycle parameters of the small stellate cell population are: S = 4.4 ± 1.2 hr (SD). G2 = 1.5 ± 1.0 hr (SD). M = 1.7 ± 0.6 hr (SD). and Gl = 3.8 ± 1.0 hr (SD). Continuous label experiments demonstrate that (G1+G2+M) increases from 7 hr in Day 4 cells, as yet unpigmented, to 12 hr in Day 5 cells that have become pigmented. This change is consistent with an increase in G1 and/or G2 that is closely correlated with the appearance of pigment granules. It is of interest that this cell cycle change is correlated with a rather late event in the developmental program of these neural crest cells rather than with the earlier morphological change observed after 3 days in culture.  相似文献   

13.
Thymic epithelial cell component originates from cranial neural crest as well as from endoderm and ectoderm of the third pharyngeal pouch and branchial cleft. Epidermal growth factor (EGF) has been previously shown to play a crucial role in directing thymic epithelial cells toward a neural-oriented cell fate. To identify genes that are involved in the EGF-induced neurotypic differentiation of the thymic stroma-derived TC-1S cell line, we studied EGF-treated and untreated cells by RNA fingerprinting PCR-based differential screening. We obtained 23 distinct sequences including 18 known genes and 5 sequences previously unreported, which are currently under characterization. Here, we describe the involvement of one of the isolated genes, the thrombospondin-1, as a mediator of the neurotypic differentiation induced by EGF in TC-1S cells. We show that thrombospondin-1 mRNA and protein levels are increased by EGF. Moreover, exogenous thrombospondin-1 is able to enhance the outgrowth of neurite-like processes as well as the expression of neurofilaments and neural cell adhesion molecule in TC-1S cells. These observations suggest that the up-regulation of thrombospondin-1 synthesis induced by EGF contributes to the differentiation choice of thymic epithelial cells toward a neural fate, reminiscent of their neural crest origin.  相似文献   

14.
15.
A clonal approach to the problem of neural crest determination.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A fundamental question regarding neural crest development is the possible pluripotential nature of this embryonic tissue. As a first step in examining this problem, clonal techniques are used to produce homogeneous populations of crest cells. Primary cultures of these cells are obtained by explanting neural tubes from Japanese quail in vitro and allowing crest cells to migrate away. The explant is removed, the outgrowth is isolated, dissociated with trypsin, and the cells plated at clonal density. Colonies derived in this manner fall into the following categories: all cells of the colony pigmented; none of the cells pigmented; and some of the cells pigmented, the remainder unpigmented. Pigmented colonies generally arise from small, round cells whereas the non-pigmented colonies usually originate from large, flattened polymorphous cells. Differentiation of melanocytes does not preclude their continued proliferation. The pigment phenotype, in addition, is stable through at least 25 generations. That the mixed colonies, in fact, are clonally derived is shown by physically isolating single cells. The identity of the non-pigment cells was not established in the present work. A possible neural fate is suggested, however, since nerve-like cells develop after the petri plates become overgrown. Neural clones did not form even though nerve growth factor activity is present as a normal constituent of the culture medium and was added as a supplement in some instances. These techniques permit the preparation of large, homogeneous populations of neural crest cells and afford an opportunity to examine aspects of crest determination heretofore impossible to study.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Cranial neural crest cell migration is patterned, with neural crest cell-free zones adjacent to rhombomere (R) 3 and R5. These zones have been suggested to result from death of premigratory neural crest cells via upregulation of BMP-4 and Msx-2 in R3 and R5, consequent to R2-, R4-, and R6-derived signals. We reinvestigated this model and found that cell death detected by acridine orange staining in avian embryos varied widely numerically and in pattern, but with a tendency for an elevated zone centered at the R2/3 boundary. In situ hybridization of BMP-4 mRNA resolved to centers at R3 and R5 but Msx-2 resolved to the R2/3 border with only a faint smear from R5 to R6. Outgrowth of neural crest cells was less in isolated R3 cultures than in R1+2, R2, and R4 cultures, but R3 showed neither a decrease in outgrowth of neural crest cells nor an increase in cell death when cocultured with R1+2, R2, or R4. In addition, in serum-free culture, exogenous BMP-4 strikingly reduced neural crest cell outgrowth from R1+2 and R4 as well as R3. Thus we cannot confirm the role of intraneural cell death in patterning rhombomeric neural crest outgrowth. However, grafting quail R2 or R4 adjacent to the chick hindbrain demonstrated a neural crest cell exclusion zone next to R3 and R5. We suggest that one important pattern determinant for rhombomeric neural crest cell migration involves the microenvironment next to the neural tube.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Retinoic acid (RA), a potent teratogen, produces a characteristic set of embryonic cardiovascular malformations similar to those observed in neural crest ablated avians. While the effects of RA on neural crest are well described, the molecular mechanism(s) of RA action on these cells is less clear. The present study examines the relationship between RA and mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling in neural crest cells and demonstrates that c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) activation is severely repressed by RA. RA suppressed migration and proliferation of primary cultures of mouse neural crest cells treated in vitro as well as from animals treated in vivo. On Western blots, JNK activation/phosphorylation in neural crest cultures was reduced, while neither extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) nor p38 pathways were affected. Both the dose-dependent stimulation of neural crest outgrowth and JNK phosphorylation by platelet-derived growth factor AA, which promotes outgrowth but not proliferation of neural crest cultures, were completely abrogated by RA. To establish the relevance of the JNK signaling pathway to cardiac neural crest migration, dominant negative adenoviral constructs were used to inhibit upstream activation of JNK or c-Jun downstream responses. Both adenoviral constructs markedly reduced neural crest cell outgrowth, while a dominant negative inhibitor of the p38 pathway had no effect. These data demonstrate that the JNK signaling pathway and c-Jun activation are critical for cardiac neural crest outgrowth and are potential targets for the action of RA.  相似文献   

20.
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