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1.
It has been demonstrated that the septation of the outflow tract of the heart is formed by the cardiac neural crest. Ablation of this region of the neural crest prior to its migration from the neural fold results in anomalies of the outflow and inflow tracts of the heart and the aortic arch arteries. The objective of this study was to examine the migration and distribution of these neural crest cells from the pharyngeal arches into the outflow region of the heart during avian embryonic development. Chimeras were constructed in which each region of the premigratory cardiac neural crest from quail embryos was implanted into the corresponding area in chick embryos. The transplantations were done unilaterally on each side and bilaterally. The quail-chick chimeras were sacrificed between Hamburger-Hamilton stages 18 and 25, and the pharyngeal region and outflow tract were examined in serial paraffin sections to determine the distribution pattern of quail cells at each stage. The neural crest cells derived from the presumptive arch 3 and 4 regions of the neuraxis occupied mainly pharyngeal arches 3 and 4 respectively, although minor populations could be seen in pharyngeal arches 2 and 6. The neural crest cells migrating from the presumptive arch 6 region were seen mainly in pharyngeal arch 6, but they also populated pharyngeal arches 3 and 4. Clusters of quail neural crest cells were found in the distal outflow tract at stage 23.  相似文献   

2.
The distribution of the extracellular matrix (ECM) glycoprotein, tenascin, has been compared with that of fibronectin in neural crest migration pathways of Xenopus laevis, quail and rat embryos. In all species studied, the distribution of tenascin, examined by immunohistochemistry, was more closely correlated with pathways of migration than that of fibronectin, which is known to be important for neural crest migration. In Xenopus laevis embryos, anti-tenascin stained the dorsal fin matrix and ECM along the ventral route of migration, but not the ECM found laterally between the ectoderma and somites where neural crest cells do not migrate. In quail embryos, the appearance of tenascin in neural crest pathways was well correlated with the anterior-to-posterior wave of migration. The distribution of tenascin within somites was compared with that of the neural crest marker, HNK-1, in quail embryos. In the dorsal halves of quail somites which contained migrating neural crest cells, the predominant tenascin staining was in the anterior halves of the somites, codistributed with the migrating cells. In rat embryos, tenascin was detectable in the somites only in the anterior halves. Tenascin was not detectable in the matrix of cultured quail neural crest cells, but was in the matrix surrounding somite and notochord cells in vitro. Neural crest cells cultured on a substratum of tenascin did not spread and were rounded. We propose that tenascin is an important factor controlling neural crest morphogenesis, perhaps by modifying the interaction of neural crest cells with fibronectin.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Summary The biogenic amines present in the carotid body Type 1 cells of two avian species (Japanese quail and chicken) were identified, by microspectrofluorometry of formaldehyde-induced fluorescence, as dopamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine respectively. These and other cytochemical properties establish the cells as members of the APUD series.Grafts of the neural rhombencephalic primordium from 6 to 10-somite quail embryos were implanted in the appropriate region of chick embryos of the same age. After up to 11 days incubation the carotid bodies of the host were freeze-dried and treated with hot formaldehyde vapour. The carotid body Type 1 cells in the chick host were identified, by the presence of dopamine and the absence of 5-HT, as cells from the quail neural crest.The dopamine phenotype in cells of quail origin thus provides a cytochemical marker which may be used for other allograft experiments. The present work confirms earlier findings, using a biological (nuclear chromatin) marker, which showed the avian carotid body to be of neural crest origin.  相似文献   

5.
Defined fragments of the anterolateral neural ridge and of the associated region of the neural plate of presomitic to three-somite stage quail embryos were grafted isotopically and isochronically into chick hosts. This resulted in the development of apparently normal brain and facial structures to which the contribution of the grafted tissue could be observed by means of the quail nuclear marker. It was shown that the anterolateral neural ridge contains the progenitor cells of the adenohypophyseal and olfactory placodes and also of the superficial ectoderm lining the nasal cavity and conchae and the superficial ectoderm of the beak. When the appropriate region of the neural ridge was involved in the quail-chick substitution, the egg tooth was made up of graft-derived cells. Grafting of the neural plate area adjacent to the "ridge" territory containing the placodal ectoderm revealed that the presumptive region of the hypothalamus is in contiguity with that of the adenohypophyseal placode. The same observation was made for the olfactory placode and the floor of the telencephalon from which the olfactive bulb later develops.  相似文献   

6.
The enteric nervous system (ENS) is mainly derived from vagal neural crest cells (NCC) that arise at the level of somites 1-7. To understand how the size and composition of the NCC progenitor pool affects ENS development, we reduced the number of NCC by ablating the neural tube adjacent to somites 3-6 to produce aganglionic gut. We then back-transplanted various somite lengths of quail neural tube into the ablated region to determine the 'tipping point', whereby sufficient progenitors were available for complete ENS formation. The addition of one somite length of either vagal, sacral or trunk neural tube into embryos that had the neural tube ablated adjacent to somites 3-6, resulted in ENS formation along the entire gut. Although these additional cells contributed to the progenitor pool, the quail NCC from different axial levels retained their intrinsic identities with respect to their ability to form the ENS; vagal NCC formed most of the ENS, sacral NCC contributed a limited number of ENS cells, and trunk NCC did not contribute to the ENS. As one somite length of vagal NCC was found to comprise almost the entire ENS, we ablated all of the vagal neural crest and back-transplanted one somite length of vagal neural tube from the level of somite 1 or somite 3 into the vagal region at the position of somite 3. NCC from somite 3 formed the ENS along the entire gut, whereas NCC from somite 1 did not. Intrinsic differences, such as an increased capacity for proliferation, as demonstrated in vitro and in vivo, appear to underlie the ability of somite 3 NCC to form the entire ENS.  相似文献   

7.
The origin of prospective M cells, which are median neuroepithelial cells that become wedge-shaped during bending of the neural plate and eventually form the midline floor of the neural tube, was determined by constructing quail/chick chimeras and using the quail nucleolar marker to identify quail donor cells in chick host blastoderms. Two possible sites of prospective M-cell origin in the epiblast were examined: a single, midline rudiment located just rostral to Hensen's node and paired rudiments flanking the cranial part of the primitive streak. Our results suggest that M cells arise exclusively from the midline, prenodal rudiment. From this rudiment, M cells extend caudally throughout the entire length of the neuroepithelium. This new information on the origin of prospective M cells will aid in the analysis of their role in neurulation.  相似文献   

8.
The cardiac neural crest contains ectomesenchymal and neural anlagen that are necessary for normal heart development. It is not known whether other regions of the neural crest are capable of supporting normal heart development. In the experiments reported herein, quail donor embryos provided cardiac, trunk, or mesencephalic neural crest to replace or add to the chick host cardiac neural crest. Neither trunk nor mesencephalic neural crest was capable of generating ectomesenchyme competent to effect truncal septation. Addition of mesencephalic neural crest resulted in a high incidence of persistent truncus arteriosus, suggesting that ectomesenchyme derived from the mesencephalic region interferes with ectomesenchyme derived from the cardiac neural crest. Derivatives from the trunk neural crest, on the other hand, did not result in abnormal development of the truncal septum. While mesencephalic neural crest seeded the cardiac ganglia with both neurons and supporting cells, this capability was limited in the trunk neural crest to the more mature regions. These studies indicate a predetermination of the ectomesenchymal derivatives of the cranial neural crest and a possible competition of neural anlagen to form neurons and supporting cells in the cardiac ganglia.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Isotopic and isochronic transplantation of fragments of quail neural tube into chick demonstrates that neural and glial cells of the entire ganglion of Remak (RG) arise from the lumbo-sacral level of the neural crest.The ganglioblasts first accumulate in the mesorectum (stage 24 of Hamburger and Hamilton, in the chick and I8 of Zacchei in the quail) and subsequently migrate cranially.Histochemical studies have been carried out on the rectal and cloacal parts of the quail RG at various stages of development. Cholinesterase activity can be detected as soon as the primordium is in place and the intensity of the reaction increases rapidly. During morphogenesis of the cloacal region the RG and the pelvic plexus become intimately associated. Catecholamine-containing cells are found first in the pelvic plexus, then in the cloacal part of the RG. Fluorescent cells are often grouped close to blood vessels and associated with non-fluorescent ganglia. Cranial to the level of the bursa of Fabricius, the RG is composed only of non-fluorescent neurons whatever the developmental stage considered (up to 1 day after hatching).The developmental capabilities of the RG of the 5-day quail have been tested by transplanting various parts of the hind-gut with the dorsal mesentery onto the chorio-allantoic membrane. Catecholamine-containing cells develop only in grafts including the cloacal region.By using quail-chick chimaerae in which the RG belongs to the quail while mesentery and gut are of chick origin, it was possible to show that neurons which develop in the graft (i.e. in the absence of preganglionic innervation), send nerve fibres into the gut wall. Moreover some neuroblasts located in the primordium of the RG migrate into the gut wall and give rise to some enteric ganglion cells. The contribution of the lumbo-sacral neural crest to the enteric ganglia, by this route, is discussed.List of Abbreviations in Text FIF formol-induced fluorescence - H & H Hamburger and Hamilton - Z Zacchei - CAM chorio-allantoic membrane - SIF small intensely fluorescent (cells)  相似文献   

10.
The location and distribution of neural crest-derived Schwann cells during development of the peripheral nerves of chick forelimbs were examined using chick-quail chimeras. Neural crest cells were labeled by transplantation of the dorsal part of the neural tube from a quail donor to a chick host at levels of the neural tube destined to give rise to brachial innervation. The ventral roots, spinal nerves, and peripheral nerves innervating the chick forelimb were examined for the presence of quail-derived neural crest cells at several stages of embryonic development. These quail cells are likely to be Schwann cells or their precursors. Quail-derived Schwann cells were present in ventral roots and spinal nerves, and were distributed along previously described neural crest migratory pathways or along the peripheral nerve fibers at all stages of development examined. During early stages of wing innervation, quail-derived Schwann cells were not evenly distributed, but were concentrated in the ventral root and at the brachial plexus. The density of neural crest-derived Schwann cells decreased distal to the plexus, and no Schwann cells were ever seen in advance of the growing nerve front. When the characteristic peripheral nerve branching pattern was first formed, Schwann cells were clustered where muscle nerves diverged from common nerve trunks. In still older embryos, neural crest-derived Schwann cells were evenly distributed along the length of the peripheral nerves from the ventral root to the distal nerve terminations within the musculature of the forelimb. These observations indicate that Schwann cells accompany axons into the developing limb, but they do not appear to lead or direct axons to their targets. The transient clustering of neural crest-derived Schwann cells in the ventral root and at places where axon trajectories diverge from one another may reflect a response to some environmental feature within these regions.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the interaction of cellular fibronectin (CFN) with cultured quail neural crest cells and its possible role in crest cell migration and differentiation. In vitro, quail neural crest cells from the trunk region differentiate into at least two morphologically recognizable cell types, melanocytes and adrenergic nerve cells. The latter often aggregate spontaneously into ganglia-like structures. We found that neither melanocytes nor adrenergic nerve cells synthesize CFN. However, both cell types readily interacted with exogenous CFN: Melanocytes removed CFN from the substratum and accumulated it in an aggegated form on their upper cell surface, whereas unpigmented cells migrated on the CFN substratum, often rearranging it into a fibrillar network. The adsorption of CFN by melanocytes was apparently without further consequences. However, catecholamine-positive cells were substantially increased after treatment with exogeneous fibronectin. The stimulation of adrenergic differentiation of neural crest cells is the first evidence for a positive regulatory role of fibronectin in differentiation.  相似文献   

12.
We have investigated the morphology and migratory behavior of quail neural crest cells on isolated embryonic basal laminae or substrata coated with fibronectin or tenascin. Each of these substrata have been implicated in directing neural crest cell migration in situ. We also observed the altered behavior of cells in response to the addition of tenascin to the culture medium independent of its effect as a migratory substratum. On tenascin-coated substrata, the rate of neural crest cell migration from neural tube explants was significantly greater than on uncoated tissue culture plastic, on fibronectin-coated plastic, or on basal lamina isolated from embryonic chick retinae. Neural crest cells on tenascin were rounded and lacked lamellipodia, in contrast to the flattened cells seen on basal lamina and fibronectin-coated plastic. In contrast, when tenascin was added to the culture medium of neural crest cells migrating on isolated basal lamina, a significant reduction in the rate of cell migration was observed. To study the nature of this effect, we used human melanoma cells, which have a number of characteristics in common with quail neural crest cells though they would be expected to have a distinct family of integrin receptors. A dose-dependent reduction in the rate of translocation was observed when tenascin was added to the culture medium of the human melanoma cell line plated on isolated basal laminae, indicating that the inhibitory effect of tenascin bound to the quail neural crest surface is probably not solely the result of competitive inhibition by tenascin for the integrin receptor. Our results show that tenascin can be used as a migratory substratum by avian neural crest cells and that tenascin as a substratum can stimulate neural crest cell migration, probably by permitting rapid detachment. Tenascin in the medium, on the other hand, inhibits both the migration rates and spreading of motile cells on basal lamina because it binds only the cell surface and not the underlying basal lamina. Cell surface-bound tenascin may decrease cell-substratum interactions and thus weaken the tractional forces generated by migrating cells. This is in contrast to the action of fibronectin, which when added to the medium stimulates cell migration by binding both to neural crest cells and the basal lamina, thus providing a bridge between the motile cells and the substratum.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Circadian rhythms in many metabolic functions including neural (transmitters) and hormonal secretion appear to change with physiological condition. It is also reported that seasonal changes in photoperiodism/reproduction and other metabolic conditions may result from a temporal interaction of circadian neural oscillations that change seasonally. To test this hypothesis, the present study was designed to study the effect of temporal synergism of two neural oscillations (serotonin and dopamine) on relative photorefractoriness of Japanese quail.Serotonin and dopamine precursor drugs (5-HTP, 5-hydroxytryptophan and L-DOPA, L-dihydroxyphenylalanine) were administered (intraperitonially 5 mg/100 g body weight) at six different time intervals of 0, 4, 8, 12, 16 and 20 hr in sexually mature quail (>12 weeks old). The birds of control group received two daily injections of normal saline. The treatment was given for 13 days in continuous condition of light and then the quail were shifted to intermediate daylength (LD 13.5:10.5 for experiment 1) and short daylength (LD 8:16 for experiment 2). Six weeks following treatment, birds in intermediate daylength showed regressed cloacal gland and testicular activity except in 12-hr group, which exhibited gonadostimulatory condition. But birds of all the groups in short daylength showed complete regression of cloacal gland after 4 weeks of the treatment. In experiment 3, reproductively quiescent relative photorefractory quail maintained under intermediate daylength (LD 13.5:10.5) received 13 daily injections of 5-HTP and L-DOPA at the interval of 12 hr. At 6 weeks post-treatment, it was observed that unlike cloacal gland of control quail, which remained regressed, that of 12-hr quail showed significant development.These findings indicate that 12-hr temporal interaction of 5-HTP and L-DOPA administration maintained reproductive system in stimulated condition and prevented reproductive regression in photorefractory quail, but did not prevent the onset of scotosensitivity. It is concluded that the 12-hr temporal relationship of circadian serotonergic and dopaminergic oscillations not only eliminates photorefractoriness but may also re-establish photosensitivity in relative photorefractory quail. These findings suggest the regulatory role of neural oscillations and their temporal interaction in the regulation of neuroendocrine-gonadal axis with special reference to photosensitivity/refractoriness.  相似文献   

15.
Summary If quail neural crest cells are grafted to the chick, they migrate into the feathers of the host and produce melanin pigment. In one study, the dorsal trunk feathers of the chimaera were found to have quail-like pigment patterns. This was interpreted in terms of a positional information model. By contrast, in another study it was found that pigment patterns in the wing plumage of the chimaera bore little or no resemblance to the quail, showing instead a rather uniform, dark pigmentation. This was interpreted in terms of a prepattern in the ectoderm. This striking difference in results could be because the wing and trunk plumages have their pigment patterns specified in different ways. We have examined this possibility by making detailed maps of the dorsal trunk plumage of the normal quail and the quail-chick chimaera. Using this novel technique, we can accurately record the secondary pigment patterns in the embryonic down plumage. In the quail there are well-defined, longitudinal stripes running down the back, whereas the chimaera shows rather uniform, dark pigment in this area. There is little or no indication of stripes and some chimaerae develop asymmetric, mottled patterns. Grafts to the cephalic region also produce uniform pigmentation with no quail-like patterning. These findings indicate that neural crest cells cannot read positional values in the feathers of another species.  相似文献   

16.
In order to address the problem of when heterogeneity arises within premigratory and early migratory neural crest cell populations, mouse monoclonal antibodies were raised against quail premigratory neural crest. Due to the limited availability of immunogen an intrasplenic route for immunization was used. Three monoclonal antibodies (referred to as LH2D4, LH5D3 and LH6C2) were subsequently isolated which recognized subpopulations in 24 h cultures of both quail and chick mesencephalic and trunk neural crest in immunocytochemical studies. Subsequent investigations using a range of six antibodies, including LH2D4, LH5D3 and LH6C2, showed that population heterogeneity (which was not cell cycle related) could be detected as early as 15 h following mesencephalic crest explantation, a stage at which all the neural crest cells were morphologically identical. However, premigratory neural crest from the same axial level of origin was homogeneous, as judged by immunoreactivity patterns with these antibodies. Significant differences were found in the proportion of immunoreactive cells between populations of mesencephalic and trunk neural crest cultures. Double immunofluorescence studies revealed the existence of at least four separate cell populations within individual crest cultures, each identified by their unique antibody reactivity pattern, thus providing some insight into the underlying complexity of subpopulation composition within the neural crest. Immunocytochemical studies on quail embryos from stages 7-22 showed that the epitopes detected by LH2D4, LH5D3 and LH6C2 were not necessarily confined to the neural crest or to cells of crest derivation. All three epitopes displayed a spatiotemporal regulation in their expression during early avian ontogeny. Since the differential epitope expression described in this investigation was detectable as early as 15 h after premigratory neural crest explantation, took place in vitro in the absence of any other cell type and changed progressively with time, we conclude that a certain degree of population heterogeneity can be generated very early in neural crest ontogeny and independently of the tissue interactions that normally ensue in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Neural crest cells from quail embryos grown in standard culture dishes differentiate almost entirely into melanocytes within 4 or 5 days when chick embryo extract (CEE) or occasional lots of fetal calf serum (FCS) are included in the medium. Gel fractionation showed that the pigment inducing factor(s) present in these media is of high molecular weight (> 400 K daltons). In the absence of CEE, the neural tube can also stimulate melanocyte differentiation. Culture medium supplemented by selected lots of FCS permits crest cell proliferation but little overt differentiation after up to 2 weeks in culture if the neural tube is removed within 18 h of explantation in vitro. Subsequent addition of CEE to such cultures promotes complete melanocyte differentiation. Crest cells from White leghorn chick embryos also differentiate into melanocytes in the presence of CEE, but do not survive well in its absence. Melanocyte differentiation of crest cells from both quail and chick embryos can by suppressed by culturing under a dialysis membrane, even in the presence of the neural tube and CEE, but neuronal differentiation appears greatly enhanced.  相似文献   

18.
The neural crest-derived precursors of the sympathoadrenal lineage depend on environmental cues to differentiate as sympathetic neurons and pheochromocytes. We have used the monoclonal antibody A2B5 as a marker for neuronal differentiation and antisera against catecholamine synthesis enzymes to investigate the differentiation of catecholaminergic cells in cultures of quail neural crest cells. Cells corresponding phenotypically to sympathetic neurons and pheochromocytes can be identified in neural crest cell cultures after 5-6 days in vitro. Expression of the A2B5 antigen precedes expression of immunocytochemically detectable levels of tyrosine hydroxylase in cultured neural crest cells. Glucocorticoid treatment decreases the proportion of TH+ neural crest cells that express neuronal traits. We conclude that environmental cues normally encountered by sympathoadrenal precursors in vivo can influence the differentiation of a subpopulation of cultured neural crest cells in the sympathoadrenal lineage.  相似文献   

19.
The embryonic origin of peripheral nerve Schwann/sheath cells is still uncertain. Although the neural crest is known to be an important source, it is not clear whether the ventral neural tube also contributes a progenitor population for motor axons. We have used the techniques of immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy and quail-chick grafting to examine this problem. Immunohistochemistry with monoclonal antibody HNK-1 identified a cluster of immunoreactive cells in the sclerotome, at the site of the future ventral root. With the electron microscope, nucleated cells could not be seen breaching the basal lamina of the neural tube, exclusively in the region of the ventral root and preceding axon outgrowth. After grafting a length of crest-ablated quail neural tube in place of host chick neural tube, a population of quail cells was found localized to the ventral root exit zone, associated with the ventral root axons. Taken together, these observations support the possibility of a neural tube origin for ventral root sheath cells, although we found no evidence for a more extensive migration of these cells. The ventral root cells share certain phenotypic traits, such as HNK-1 immunoreactivity, with neural-crest-derived Schwann cells, but are not necessarily identical to them. We argue that while they may help motor axons to exit the neural tube at the correct position, they are unlikely to guide axons beyond the immediate vicinity of the neural tube.  相似文献   

20.
Embryonic 4- to 15-day-old quail ciliary ganglia (CG) were grafted into the neural crest migration pathway of 2-day-old chick embryos at the adrenomedullary level of the neural axis. This back-transplantation results in dispersion of cells of the implanted ganglion, their migration in the host embryo, and subsequent promotion of their differentiation into a variety of neural-crest-derived cell types including adrenergic cells of the sympathetic ganglia and adrenal medulla. These cells can be recognized in the host through the nuclear marker that they carry. Here, we have analyzed quantitatively the expansion of CG-derived cell population after the graft, and compared cell division in CG after back-transplantation and during normal in situ development over the same period of time. Tritiated-thymidine [( 3H]TdR) incorporation showed that grafted CG cells proliferated during their migration and, to a greater extent, after they had homed to the host structures. Furthermore, proliferative activity of quail cells in the graft was found to be significantly higher than the growth rate of the CG cells in situ during the same period of development. In the quail donor embryo, the birthdate of the CG neurons occurred early in development; from 6 days onward, only nonneuronal cells were still dividing. When back-transplanted, the 4- to 5-day-old CG provided numerous quail cells located in autonomic structures of the host embryo. However, this increase of the total quail cell population and of cell division was reduced when CG were taken from quail donors at progressively later developmental stages. Postmitotic neurons from mature CG were found not to survive under the graft conditions. It is proposed that back-transplantation of the CG stimulates cell division and modifies the developmental programme of still undifferentiated precursor cells which then can give rise to a variety of cell types belonging either to the glial or the autonomic nerve and paraganglionic cell phenotypes, to the exclusion of sensory neurons which never derive from CG grafts.  相似文献   

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