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1.
An orderly pattern of cell death accompanies growth of retinal ganglion cell axons through the optic stalk of the chick embryo. In order to determine ifthe cell death process in this adage is preprogrammed at earlier stages or if other factors play a role, we cultured optic stalk primordia at a stage prior to retinal differentiation, either alone or in the presence of head or limb bud mesenchyme. When optic stalk was alone, many cells differentiated into neurons. However, when mesenchyme cells of either head or limb bud origin were combined with the stalk, the stalk cells either degenerated, were unrecognizable in the mesenchyme mass, or retained their epithelial arrangement and became pigmented. Mesenchyme and/or neural crest which normally migrate around the stalk at the same time that ganglion cell axons penetrate this structure may therefore be involved in some aspect of the cell death process. Since many optic stalk cells in vitro differentiate into neurons, these cells may represent the population of cells which in situ would normally die.  相似文献   

2.
Mesenchyme cell populations prepared from proximal and distal halves of stage 20 mouse forelimb buds are shown to behave under in vitro micromass culture conditions like analogous cell populations obtained from chick embryo limb buds. While the distal cells are spontaneously chondrogenic, the proximal cells make aggregates which are only potentially chondrogenic after treatment with dibutyryl cyclic AMP. In addition, stage 20 mouse whole limb bud cells homozygous for the brachypodismH (bpH) mutation are shown to behave similarly to 'normal' proximal cells. Both make fewer aggregates and nodules and both have faster aggregation rates (determined as the rate of disappearance of single cells over time) in rotation cultures than 'normal' distal or whole limb bud cells. These results support the hypothesis that the bpH mutation specifically decreases the proportion of spontaneously chondrogenic mesenchyme cells (that is, distal-like cells) present at certain developmental stages in the limb bud, resulting in a prematurely high proportion of proximal-like cells.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract. Mesenchyme cell populations prepared from proximal and distal halves of stage 20 mouse forelimb buds are shown to behave under in vitro micromass culture conditions like analogous cell populations obtained from chick embryo limb buds. While the distal cells are spontaneously chondrogenic, the proximal cells make aggregates which are only potentially chondrogenic after treatment with dibutyryl cyclic AMP. In addition, stage 20 mouse whole limb bud cells homozygous for the brachypodismH ( bp H ) mutation are shown to behave similarly to 'normal' proximal cells. Both make fewer aggregates and nodules and both have faster aggregation rates (determined as the rate of disappearance of single cells over time) in rotation cultures than 'normal' distal or whole limb bud cells. These results support the hypothesis that the bp H mutation specifically decreases the proportion of spontaneously chondrogenic mesenchyme cells (that is, distal-like cells) present at certain developmental stages in the limb bud, resulting in a prematurely high proportion of proximal-like cells.  相似文献   

4.
Wnts control a number of processes during limb development—from initiating outgrowth and controlling patterning, to regulating cell differentiation in a number of tissues. We analyzed the expression pattern of various Wnts (4, 5a, 5b, 6, 11, and 14) in whole mount in situ hybridization during chick wing development. From HH stage 26, expression of Wnt 4 is observed in the central elbow region and wrist-forming regions, and during later stages, expression is seen in the joint-forming regions of the whole limb. Wnt 5a is expressed throughout the limb mesenchyme during early limb developmental stages, and later, at HH stage 23, it becomes predominantly confined to the distal tip, leaving low expression levels proximally. At HH stage 29, expression at the distal tip is restricted to the interdigital regions, and at day 8, expression is seen in the region surrounding the phalanges. Wnt 5b expression is first observed in the AER at HH stage 20 and later in the dorsal and ventral mesenchyme surrounding the cartilage elements of the limb. Expression of Wnt 6 is observed from HH stage 17 until day 8 in the dorsal and ventral ectoderm and also in the dorsoventral limb boundaries. Expression of Wnt 11 is observed in the proximal dorsal mesenchyme of the limb from HH stage 23 onward and later in the dorsal and ventral subectodermal mesenchyme and in the regions adjacent to the digits at day 8. Weak expression of Wnt 14 is observed at the proximal mesenchyme of the limb at HH stage 23; later, it extends as a transverse strip surrounding the cartilage elements as well as in the interdigital mesenchyme.This paper is dedicated to Professor Dr. W. Zenker on the occasion of his 80th birthday.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Mesenchyme cells isolated from mouse embryo forelimb buds (stages 15 through 21) and placed in high-density micromass cultures are compared with respect to their in vitro histogenic capacities. Particular emphasis is placed on changes in in vitro chondrogenic capacity. Stage 15 mouse limb cultures form numerous aggregates which uniformly fail to differentiate into cartilage nodules. On the other hand, cartilage nodules are observed in cultures prepared from all subsequent stage limbs, although there is a linear decrease in the size of nodules between stage 16–17 and middle-late stage 21 cultures. This decrease correlates with simultaneous decreases in both the proportion of aggregating cells and the extent of dibutyryl cyclic AMP-stimulated cartilage formation. At the same time, observations indicate that the proportions of nonaggregating and nonchondrogenic mesenchyme, myogenic cells, and, perhaps, fibrogenic mesenchyme are increasing. The only exceptions to these patterns are observed in cultures from middle-late stage 21 limbs, when cartilage differentiation in situ is already extensive. Unlike earlier stage cultures, which form nearly identical numbers of aggregates and nodules, middle-late stage 21 cultures form variable numbers of aggregates, only a few of which differentiate into cartilage nodules. Middle-late stage 21 cultures also contain unexpectedly low numbers of myogenic cells/unit area of culture. Based on changes in the in vitro histogenic capacities, it is concluded that concurrent with a progression of morphogenic events in the limb, there is a progression of changes in the relative proportions of cell subpopulations. Both the existence of the different subpopulations and the changes in their relative proportions can be detected in vitro. Furthermore, it is concluded that cartilage formation in the limbs of both mouse and chick embryos probably occurs according to very similar developmental programs.  相似文献   

7.
Lateral plate mesoderm is native to the developing limb while other cells such as neurons extend migratory axonal processes from the neural tube. Questions regarding how axons migrate to their proper location in the developing limb remain unanswered. Extracellular matrix molecules expressed in developing limb cartilages, such as the versican proteoglycan, may function as inhibitory cues to nerve migration, thus facilitating its proper patterning. In the present study, a method is described for co-culture of neural tissue with high density micromass preparations of mouse limb mesenchyme in order to investigate neurite patterning during limb chondrogenesis in vitro. Comparison of hdf (heart defect) mouse limb mesenchyme, which bears an insertional mutation in the versican proteoglycan core protein, with wild type demonstrated that the described technique provides a useful method for transgenic analysis in studies of chondrogenic regulation of neurite patterning. Differentiating wild type limb mesenchyme expressed cartilage characteristic Type II collagen and versican at 1 day and exhibited numerous well defined cartilage foci by 3 days. Wild type neurites extended into central regions of host cultures between 3 and 6 days and consistently avoided versican positive chondrogenic aggregates. Wild type neural tubes cultured with hdf limb mesenchyme, which does not undergo cartilage differentiation in a wild type pattern, showed that axons exhibited no avoidance characteristics within the host culture. Results suggest that differentiating limb cartilages may limit migration of axons thus aiding in the ultimate patterning of peripheral nerve in the developing limb.  相似文献   

8.
The requirement for homotypic cell interaction was studied by making chimeric micromass cultures containing various proportions of chick and quail limb mesenchyme. Cultures made from limb mesenchyme from embryos of Hamburger and Hamilton stages 23–24 produce large clumps of cartilage cells, identified by the accumulation of an extracellular matrix which stains with alcian blue at pH 1 and by the ability of cells to take up 35SO4 rapidly, as demonstrated autoradiographically. Dissociated mesenchyme from stage 19 embryos did not produce cartilage in micromass cultures, but only precartilage cell aggregates. Micromass cultures prepared from mixtures of mesenchyme cells obtained from stage 19 and stages 23–24 embryos contained decreasing numbers of cartilage nodules as the proportion of stage 19-derived mesenchyme increased. At the same time the number of aggregates was not affected. When the ratio of stage 19- to stage 24-derived cells was 3:1 or greater, no nodules were detected. The actual number of cells from each stage was verified by using mixtures of quail and chick cells, which are microscopically distinguishable. Additional evidence suggests that the stage 19-derived mesenchyme inhibits chondrogenesis by passively preventing stage 24-derived cells from interacting. The results presented are consistent with the suggestions that (1) homotypic cell interaction plays a role in limb chondrogenesis and (2) the capacity to interact in the required manner is acquired after the embryos have reached stage 19. These phenomena might be involved in the normal histogenesis of cartilage tissue.  相似文献   

9.
Studies of neural, hepatic, and other cells have demonstrated thatin vitroethanol exposure can influence a variety of membrane-associated signaling mechanisms. These include processes such as receptor-kinase phosphorylation, adenylate cyclase and protein kinase C activation, and prostaglandin production that have been implicated as critical regulators of chondrocyte differentiation during embryonic limb development. The potential for ethanol to affect signaling mechanisms controlling chondrogenesis in the developing limb, together with its known ability to promote congenital skeletal deformitiesin vivo,prompted us to examine whether chronic alcohol exposure could influence cartilage differentiation in cultures of prechondrogenic mesenchyme cells isolated from limb buds of stage 23–25 chick embryos. We have made the novel and surprising finding that ethanol is a potent stimulant ofin vitrochondrogenesis at both pre- and posttranslational levels. In high-density cultures of embryonic limb mesenchyme cells, which spontaneously undergo extensive cartilage differentiation, the presence of ethanol in the culture medium promoted increased Alcian-blue-positive cartilage matrix production, a quantitative rise in35SO4incorporation into matrix glycosaminoglycans (GAG), and the precocious accumulation of mRNAs for cartilage-characteristic type II collagen and aggrecan (cartilage proteoglycan). Stimulation of matrix GAG accumulation was maximal at a concentration of 2% ethanol (v/v), although a significant increase was elicited by as little as 0.5% ethanol (approximately 85 mM). The alcohol appears to directly influence differentiation of the chondrogenic progenitor cells of the limb, since ethanol elevated cartilage formation even in cultures prepared from distal subridge mesenchyme of stage 24/25 chick embryo wing buds, which is free of myogenic precursor cells. When limb mesenchyme cells were cultured at low density, which suppresses spontaneous chondrogenesis, ethanol exposure induced the expression of high levels of type II collagen and aggrecan mRNAs and promoted abundant cartilage matrix formation. These stimulatory effects were not specific to ethanol, since methanol, propanol, and tertiary butanol treatments also enhanced cartilage differentiation in embryonic limb mesenchyme cultures. Further investigations of the stimulatory effects of ethanol onin vitrochondrogenesis may provide insights into the mechanisms regulating chondrocyte differentiation during embryogenesis and the molecular basis of alcohol's teratogenic effects on skeletal morphogenesis.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Cartilage formation in the chick limb follows rapid proliferation, condensation and differentiation of limb mesenchyme. The control of these early events is poorly understood. Platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGFR-alpha) is present throughout the mesenchyme of early chick limb buds, while its ligand, PDGF-A, is expressed in the surrounding epithelium. PDGFR-alpha is down-regulated in areas that will not give rise to cartilage and is then lost from cartilage forming areas after they begin to differentiate. PDGF-A increases chondrogenesis in micromass cultures of stage-20-24 limb buds, but not stage 25, where it inhibits chondrogenesis. Ectopic PDGF-A in the chick wing can lead to either a localized increase in cartilage formation, or an inhibition. Inhibition of PDGF signalling in the chick limb results in the loss of cartilage. These data demonstrate that PDGF-A functions to promote chondrogenesis at early stages of limb development and suggest that it inhibits chondrogenesis at later stages.  相似文献   

12.
As an initial step in characterizing the function of basal lamina components during muscle cell differentiation and innervation in vivo, we have determined immunohistochemically the pattern of expression of three components--laminin, proteins related to agrin (an acetylcholine receptor (AChR)-aggregating protein), and a heparan sulfate proteoglycan--during the development of chick embryo hindlimb muscles. Monoclonal antibodies against agrin were used to purify the protein from the Torpedo ray and to characterize agrin-like proteins from embryonic and adult chicken. In early hindlimb buds (stage 19), antibodies against laminin and agrin stained the ectodermal basement membrane and bound to limb mesenchyme with a generalized, punctate distribution. However, as dorsal and ventral premuscle masses condensed (stage 22-23), mesenchymal immunoreactivity for laminin and agrin-like proteins, but not the proteoglycan, became concentrated in these myogenic regions. Significantly, the preferential accumulation of these molecules in myogenic regions of the limb preceded by 1-2 days the appearance of muscle-specific proteins, myoblast fusion, and muscle innervation. All three basal lamina components were preferentially associated with all AChR clusters from the time we first observed them on newly formed myotubes at stage 26. Localization of these antigens in three-dimensional collagen gel cultures of limb mesenchyme, explanted prior to innervation of the limb, paralleled the staining patterns seen during limb development in the embryo. These results indicate that basal lamina molecules intrinsic to limb mesenchyme are early markers for myogenic and synaptic differentiation, and suggest that these components play important roles during the initial phases of myogenesis and synaptogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
Axon fasciculation is one of the processes controlling topographic innervation during embryonic development. While axon guidance steers extending axons in the accurate direction, axon fasciculation allows sets of co-extending axons to grow in tight bundles. The Eph:ephrin family has been involved both in axon guidance and fasciculation, yet it remains unclear how these two distinct types of responses are elicited. Herein we have characterized the role of ephrin-B1, a member of the ephrinB family in sensory and motor innervation of the limb. We show that ephrin-B1 is expressed in sensory axons and in the limb bud mesenchyme while EphB2 is expressed in motor and sensory axons. Loss of ephrin-B1 had no impact on the accurate dorso-ventral innervation of the limb by motor axons, yet EfnB1 mutants exhibited decreased fasciculation of peripheral motor and sensory nerves. Using tissue-specific excision of EfnB1 and in vitro experiments, we demonstrate that ephrin-B1 controls fasciculation of axons via a surround repulsion mechanism involving growth cone collapse of EphB2-expressing axons. Altogether, our results highlight the complex role of Eph:ephrin signaling in the development of the sensory-motor circuit innervating the limb.  相似文献   

14.
Regenerated hindlimbs of larval Xenopus laevis were reamputated at critical larval stages and levels, viz when amputation of the control limb at the same larval stage and level is followed by reduced regeneration. Reamputations were performed at the level of (1) the original plane of amputation, (2) the early regenerate (cone/palette stage), (3) the late regenerate (digit stage). Reamputation increased both the percentage rate of regeneration and the morphological complexity of the regenerates in all experimental series. Cell counts in lateral motor columns and spinal ganglia innervating the hindlimb, together with histological observations and mitotic index and labelling index determinations in reamputated and control limbs showed that improved regeneration in the reamputated limb was related to an increase in undifferentiated and proliferating cells in the stump. We did not find any evidence suggesting that renewed regeneration in reamputated anuran limbs results from an increase in innervation, as has previously been hypothesized. We support our conclusions by demonstrating an improvement in regenerationen in the reamputated and denervated hindlimbs.  相似文献   

15.
The appearance of beta-enolase, a glycolytic enzyme, was studied immunohistochemically using the upper limb bud of human embryos at Carnegie stages from 13 to 21. beta-Enolase-immunoreactive cells first appeared at stage 15 in the proximal portion of the upper limb bud. It was evidenced that glycogen granules first appear at the same stage. These results may suggest that changes in energy metabolism might be one of the earliest events in the differentiating steps of the skeletal muscles because this stage is earlier than the stages of cell fusion, myofilament formation and innervation of the muscle cells.  相似文献   

16.
Total cell number and number of the primary mesenchyme cells of 1/2 and 1/4 larvae were counted at several developmental stages after hatching in comparison with those of a whole larva, using Clypeaster japonicus as material. To obtain partial larvae, blastomeres were isolated at the 2- or 4-cell stage in Ca-free sea water and cultured in natural sea water at around 23°C. Isolated blastomeres cleaved as in situ, namely, as a part of an embryo. Although each partial embryo tended to spread into a plate, it acquired spherical shape prior to hatching of control whole embryo and developed normally in terms of both developmental rate and morphogenesis. Total cell number of a whole larva was about 620 just after hatching and increased almost linearly until i t reached 1850 at the pluteus stage. A half and quarter larvae contained roughly 1/2 and 1/4, respectively, of the number of cells of whole larva through all stages counted. Numbers of the primary mesenchyme cells in the partial larvae, however, tended to be slightly larger than a half or a fourth of that in whole larva. In whole larva, 35, 50, 56 and 58 was counted at the mesenchyme blastula, early gastrula, late gastrula and pluteus stage, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of developmental stage on chondrogenic capacity in high-density cell cultures of chick embryonic wing bud mesenchyme is examined. Mesenchyme from stage 19 embryos forms aggregates of closely associated cells which do not form cartilage matrix, nor contain significant levels of type II collagen that are detectable by immunofluorescence, unless they are treated with dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Mesenchyme from stage 24 embryonic wing buds in high-density cell cultures will spontaneously form cartilage, as defined by electron microscopy and immunofluorescence with antibody to type II collagen. Cultures prepared from stage 26 wings form numerous aggregates which fail to accumulate an Alcian blue-staining matrix and which resemble mesenchyme cells morphologically. However, because these cells show considerable intracellular immunofluorescence for type II collagen, they are actually unexpressed cartilage cells. Several treatments, including exposure to dibutyryl cyclic AMP, ascorbic acid and an atmosphere of 5% oxygen, or mixture with small numbers of stage 24 wing mesenchyme cells, stimulate expression, as determined by the accumulation of an Alcian blue-staining matrix and an ultrastructurally recognizable cartilage matrix. Since the addition of similar numbers of differentiated cartilage cells does not stimulate expression of stage 26 cells, it is proposed that initial cartilage expression is dependent on a mesenchyme-specific influence which might be removed by cell dissociation. These studies demonstrate that there are at least two distinct transitions in cartilage differentiation: one involves the conversion of mesenchyme to unexpressed chondrocytes and the second involves mesenchyme-dependent expression of chondrogenic differentiation.  相似文献   

18.
Undifferentiated limb bud mesenchyme consists of at least two separate, possibly predetermined, populations of progenitor cells, one derived from somitic mesoderm that gives rise exclusively to skeletal muscle and one derived from somatopleural mesoderm that gives rise to the cartilage and connective tissue of the limb. In the present study, we demonstrate that the inherent migratory capacity of myogenic precursor cells can be used to physically separate the myogenic and chondrogenic progenitor cells of the undifferentiated limb mesenchyme at the earliest stages of limb development. When the undifferentiated mesenchyme of stage 18/19 chick embryo wing buds or from the distal subridge region of stage 22 wing buds is placed intact upon the surface of fibronectin (FN)-coated petri dishes, a large population of cells emigrates out of the explants onto the FN substrates and differentiates into an extensive interlacing network of bipolar spindle-shaped myoblasts and multinucleated myotubes that stain with monoclonal antibody against muscle-specific fast myosin light chain. In contrast, the cells of the explants that remain in place and do not migrate away undergo extensive cartilage differentiation. Significantly, there is no emigration of myogenic cells out of explants of stage 25 distal subridge mesenchyme, which lacks myogenic progenitor cells. Myogenic precursor cells stream out of mesenchyme explants in one or occasionally two discrete locations, suggesting they are spatially segregated in discrete regions of tissue at the time of its explantation. There are subtle overall differences in the morphologies of the myogenic cells that form in stage 18/19 and stage 22 distal subridge mesenchyme explants. Finally, groups of nonmyogenic nonfibroblastic cells which are fusiform-shaped and oriented in distinct parallel arrays characteristically are found along the periphery of stage 18/19 wing mesenchyme explants. Our observations provide support for the concept that undifferentiated limb mesenchyme consists of independent subpopulations of committed precursor cells and provides a system for studying the early determinative and regulatory events involved in myogenesis or chondrogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
We asked whether regenerating hindlimb motor axons would innervate inappropriate hindlimb regions if competition from appropriate innervation were prevented. The three ventral roots that innervate the hindlimb in the bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) tadpole were transected, and the two more rostral roots were ligated to prevent regeneration. The most caudal root, which primarily supplies more distal limb musculature in unoperated tadpoles, was left free to regenerate. The specificity of regeneration was assessed by retrogradely labeling spinal motoneurons with HRP placed in the ventral thigh, a region that receives most of its innervation from the ligated roots. Despite the lack of competition from appropriate innervation, the regenerating root did not provide substantial innervation to proximal limb musculature. The same result was obtained in tadpoles operated upon at stages when regeneration of motor axons is specific and in tadpoles at stages when regenerating motor axons do not reinnervate their appropriate targets (Farel and Bemelmans, 1986), although the mechanisms in each case are likely different.  相似文献   

20.
The plainfin midshipman, Porichthys notatus, generates acoustic communication signals through the rapid contraction of a pair of vocal (sonic) muscles attached to the walls of the swimbladder. Light and electron microscopic methods were used to study two aspects of sonic muscle ontogeny: (1) the development and transformation of myotubes into muscle fibers and (2) innervation, including the formation of sonic neuromuscular junctions and the myelination of sonic motor axons. Sonic motor axons are associated with sonic mesenchyme during its initial migration away from occipital somites. However, myofibrillogenesis, the formation of neuromuscular junctions, and axon myelination do not occur until sonic mesenchyme reaches its final destination (i.e., the swimbladder). A continuum of developing myotubes is present rather than two temporally distinct populations of primary and secondary myotubes as observed for skeletal muscles in mammalian and avian species. Potential reasons for the lack of primary and secondary myotubes are considered, including the functional homogeneity of the sonic motor system and the sonic muscle's unique architecture, namely its direct attachment to the wall of the swim-bladder. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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