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1.
Neural retinal cells of 8–9 day-old chick embryos were differentiated into pigment cells in the conditions of cell culture for about 25 days. The increase of pigment cells in vitro was semi-quantitatively shown, by counting the number of black foci of pigmented cells per plate throughout the culture period. The increase paralleled the increase in the activity of tyrosinase. The addition of a small number of pigment cells freshly dissociated from tapeta to the cultures of neural retinae did not increase the number of black foci in vitro . Electron microscopic observations revealed the morphological differences of melanin granules between those in pigment cells of the neural retinal cultures and those in cultured tapetum cells. It was discussed that pigment cells appearing in the neural retinal cultures were derived from neural retinal cells, but not from contaminated cells of the tapetum.  相似文献   

2.
Trunk neural crest cells migrate along two major pathways: a ventral pathway through the somites whose cells form neuronal derivatives and dorsolateral pathway underneath the ectoderm whose cells become pigmented. In avian embryos, the latest emigrating neural crest cells move only along the dorsolateral pathway. To test whether late emigrating neural crest cells are more restricted in developmental potential than early migrating cells, cultures were prepared from the neural tubes of embryos at various stages of neural crest cell migration. "Early" and "middle" aged neural crest cells differentiated into many derivatives including pigmented cells, neurofilament-immunoreactive cells, and adrenergic cells. In contrast, "late" neural crest cells differentiated into pigment cells and neurofilament-immunoreactive cells, but not into adrenergic cells even after 10-14 days. To further challenge the developmental potential of early and late emigrating neural crest cells, they were transplanted into embryos during the early phases of neural crest cell migration, known to be permissive for adrenergic neuronal differentiation. The cells were labeled with the vital dye, DiI, and injected onto the ventral pathway at stages 14-17. Two and three days after injection, some early neural crest cells were found to express catecholamines, suggesting they were adrenergic neuroblasts. In contrast, DiI-labeled late neural crest cells never became catecholamine-positive. These results suggest that the late emigrating neural crest cell population has a more restricted developmental potential than the early migrating neural crest cell population.  相似文献   

3.
A developmentally homogeneous neural crest cell population has been used to assay the role of environmental factors in regulating crest cell differentiation. If cultured on tissue culture plastic, virtually all of the cells of this population differentiate into melanocytes. In contrast, when these cells are cultured for 3 or more days on substrata “conditioned” by somite fibroblasts, the proportion of cells undergoing melanogenesis decreased and the proportion expressing formaldehyde-induced fluorescence (FIF), characteristic of catecholamine-containing cells, increased. For a limited period of culture on somite-conditioned substrata, some cells in the population exhibit both pigment granules and fluorescence. Collagen-coated substrata decreased the number of cells that formed pigment but did not stimulate FIF. In contrast, optimum doses of exogenous cellular fibronectin mimicked the effect of somite-conditioned substrata, suppressing melanogenesis and promoting FIF. Glycosaminoglycan-derivatized substrata (i.e., hyaluronic acid, various chondroitin sulfate preparations, and heparin) did not alter the differentiative homogeneity of the cultured crest cell populations. The choice and expression of phenotype by some members of a cultured crest cell population can, therefore, be affected by environmental stimuli provided in the form of certain substrate-attached macromolecules. We suggest that optimal concentrations of some extracellular matrix components produced by embryonic tissue and normally encountered by migrating crest cells may elicit the expression of FIF in crest cells that would otherwise follow a different developmental pathway.  相似文献   

4.
《Developmental biology》1986,118(1):268-285
The neural crest is a population of highly migratory mesenchymal cells that ultimately localize in specific sites and differentiate into a variety of cell types. This report describes studies on the factors governing the migratory pathways, differentiation, and ultimate localization of the neural crest-derived pigment cells (black melanophores and yellow xanthophores) in the California newt, Taricha torosa. Melanophores first appear scattered in the dorsal portion of the lateral neural crest migratory pathway (between the somites and the ectoderm). These cells are eventually found in two stripes: a dorsal stripe that runs along the apex of the somites, and a midbody stripe near the somite-lateral plate mesoderm border. Melanophores are not seen in the dorsal fin of prehatching embryos. Xanthophores can be identified with the light microscope using NH4OH-induced autofluorescence of pteridines and in the transmission electron microscope (TEM) by the presence of pterinosomes. Xanthophores first appear scattered among the melanophores over the surface of the somites; these cells eventually are found between the two melanophore stripes and in the dorsal fin. We were interested in determining the roles of the extracellular matrix (ECM) in controlling the formation of pigment cell patterns in T. torosa. Immunocytochemistry, Alcian blue staining of paraffin sections and ruthenium red staining of thin sections (accompanied by Streptomyces hyaluronidase and chondroitinase ABC digestion) were used to identify the composition and distribution of the ECM surrounding the pigment cells at various stages during development. The adhesive glycoprotein fibronectin is found in the dorsal portion of the lateral neural crest migratory pathway as well as in the dorsal fin matrix. Glycosaminoglycans (GAG) are found primarily in the dorsal fin and in the ECM surrounding the notochord. The dorsal fin ECM contains hyaluronate (HA), which was identified in the TEM as Streptomyces hyaluronidase-sensitive 3–5 nm microfibrils, as well as sulfated proteoglycan aggregates. We then confronted T. torosa neural crest cells in vitro with known ECM molecules. When neural folds are explanted onto tissue culture plastic in half-strength L-15 medium containing 10% fetal calf serum (FCS), cells migrate from the explant and differentiate into melanophores after 6 to 9 days. Xanthophores appear in the cultures 2 to 4 days after the appearance of melanophores. When cultured on three-dimensional collagen gels, xanthophores migrate significantly farther (P < 0.01) onto and into the collagen than melanophores (336 ± 183 vs 196 ± 160 μm from the edge of the explant). When 2.5 mg/ml chondroitin sulfate (CS) is present in the collagen gel, the distance that both pigment cell types migrate from the explant is reduced, with the result being that only xanthophores invade the GAG-rich matrix. When 1 mg/ml HA is present in the collagen gel, the differentiation of pigment cells is inhibited. Melanophores appear 48 hr later than in control gels without HA, and the number of melanophores in the explant after 10 days is significantly reduced (P < 0.01; 26.6 vs 1.1 melanophores/explant). When 1 mg/ml of HA is added to the FCS-enriched medium over neural crest cells spreading on tissue culture plastic, there is a similar delay and inhibition of pigment cell differentiation. With 2 mg/ml of CS there is no effect on pigment cell differentiation in vitro. Melanophores eventually appear in the dorsal fin of T. torosa several weeks after hatching. When fragments of dorsal fin that contain no apparent melanophores are transferred onto tissue culture plastic, melanophores appear in the explants after a few days in culture. These results suggest the following model of ECM-cell interactions during pigment cell pattern formation in T. torosa: Pigment cells differentiate in regions of the embryo that contain relatively little GAG. Xanthophores are able to invade the GAG-rich dorsal fin, but melanophores can not. The melanophores that eventually appear in the dorsal fin are derived from the neural crest cells that invaded the fin during early development, and were delayed in differentiating by the presence of HA.  相似文献   

5.
The possible multipotential nature of the neural retina of early chick embryos was examined by the technique of clonal cell culture. Cultures were prepared from cells dissociated from freshly excised neural retinas of 3.5-day-old chick embryos or from cells harvested from primary highdensity cultures. The following four colony types were obtained: colonies differentiating into “lentoid bodies”; colonies with pigment cells; colonies with both “lentoid bodies” and pigment cells; and colonies comprised entirely of unidentifiable cells. Neuronal differentiation occurred frequently in the early stages of culture (up to about 10 days). In some of these neuronal colonies, “lentoid bodies” and, rarely, both “lentoid bodies” and pigment cells differentiated after a further culture period of up to 30 days. Secondary colonies established from primary colonies after 9–10 days demonstrated that these original colonies fell into four different categories: those giving rise to secondary colonies containing only “lentoid bodies,” those giving rise to pigmented colonies only, those developing both lentoid and pigmented colonies, and finally those which gave rise to secondary colonies of all three types, lentoid, pigmented, and mixed colonies. When primary pigmented colonies were recloned at about 30 days after inoculation, the differentiated pigment cells transdifferentiated into lens. Whether multispecific colonies were really of clonal origin or not is discussed. The possible presence of a multipotent progenitor cell able to give rise to multispecific clones in the neural retina of 3.5-day-old chick embryos is suggested. A sequence of differentiation starting from multipotent neural retinal cells to be terminated with lens through the differentiation of neuronal and pigment cells is hypothetically proposed.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Teleost retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells contain pigment granules within apical projections which undergo actin‐dependent, bi‐directional motility. Dissociated RPE cells in culture attach to the substrate and extend apical projections in a radial array from the central cell body. Pigment granules within projections can be triggered to aggregate or disperse by the presence or absence of 1 mM cAMP. Aminated, fluorescent latex beads attached to the dorsal surface of apical projections and moved in the retrograde direction, towards the cell body. Bead rates on RPE cells with aggregating or fully aggregated pigment granules were 2.2 ± 0.5 and 2.6 ± 0.2 μm/min (mean ± SEM), respectively, similar to rates of aggregating (retrograde) pigment granule movement (2.0 ± 0.4 μm/min). Bead rates were slightly slower on cells with fully dispersed or dispersing pigment granules (1.5 ± 0.1 and 1.5 ± 0.4 μm/min). Movements of surface‐attached beads and aggregating pigment granules were closely correlated in the distal portions of apical projections, but were more independent of each other in proximal regions of the projections. The actin disrupting drug, cytochalasin D (CD), reversibly halted retrograde bead movements, suggesting that motility of surface‐attached particles is actin‐dependent. In contrast, the microtubule depolymerizing drug, nocodazole, had no effect on retrograde bead motility. The similar characteristics and actin‐dependence of retrograde bead movements and aggregating pigment granules suggest a correlation between these two processes.  相似文献   

8.
In vitro clonal analysis of quail cardiac neural crest development   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The developmental potentials of cardiac neural crest cells were investigated by in vitro clonal analysis. Five morphologically distinct types of clones were observed: (1) "pigmented" clones contained melanocytes only; (2) "mixed" clones consisted of pigmented and unpigmented cells; (3) "unpigmented dense" clones consisted of flattened, closely aligned unpigmented cells; (4) "unpigmented loose" clones consisted of a few loosely arranged, flattened cells; and (5) "unpigmented large" clones included a large number of small, stellate cells that were highly proliferative. The binding patterns of antibodies against lineage-specific markers showed that cells in the different clones expressed characteristic phenotypes. The following phenotypes were expressed in addition to pigment cells: smooth muscle cells, connective tissue cells, chondrocytes, and cells in the sensory neuron lineage. Mixed clones expressed all five phenotypes. Unpigmented dense clones contained smooth muscle cells, connective tissue cells, chondrocytes, and sensory neurons. Unpigmented loose clones exclusively consisted of smooth muscle cells, whereas unpigmented large clones contained chondrocytes and sensory neuron precursors. Based on these results, the following conclusions can be drawn: (1) Pigmented and unpigmented loose clones are most likely formed by precursors that are committed to the melanogenic and myogenic cell lineages, respectively. (2) Mixed and unpigmented dense clones are derived from pluripotent cells with the capacity to give rise to four or five phenotypes. (3) Unpigmented large clones originate from progenitor cells that appear to have a partially restricted developmental potential, that is, these cells are capable of generating two phenotypes in clonal cultures. Thus, the data indicate that the early migratory cardiac neural crest is a heterogeneous population of cells, consisting of pluripotent cells, cells with a partially restricted developmental potential, and cells committed to a particular cell lineage.  相似文献   

9.
The origins of neural crest cells in the axolotl   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
We address the question of whether neural crest cells originate from the neural plate, from the epidermis, or from both of these tissues. Our past studies revealed that a neural fold and neural crest cells could arise at any boundary created between epidermis and neural plate. To examine further the formation of neural crest cells at newly created boundaries in embryos of a urodele (Ambystoma mexicanum), we replace a portion of the neural folds of an albino host with either epidermis or neural plate from a normally pigmented donor. We then look for cells that contain pigment granules in the neural crest and its derivatives in intact and sectioned host embryos. By tracing cells in this manner, we find that cells from neural plate transplants give rise to melanocytes and (in one case) become part of a spinal ganglion, and we find that epidermal transplants contribute cells to the spinal and cranial ganglia. Thus neural crest cells arise from both the neural plate and the epidermis. These results also indicate that neural crest induction is (at least partially) governed by local reciprocal interactions between epidermis and neural plate at their common boundary.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of strychnine sulfate and light on pigmentation in the ciliate protozoan Blepharisma undulans has been determined. Upon exposure of cells to strychnine, the pigment granules become loosened from their surrounding membranes. Eventually these membranes break and the granules are simultaneously released from the cell. At the cell surface, a fusion occurs between adjacent membraneless granules with the incorporation of membrane fragments. This fusion of granules and membrane fragments results in the formation of a pigmented "capsule" around the organism. After elimination of the pigment, the granule membranes remaining in the cytoplasm fuse to form apparently empty vesicles. Other cell organelles are generally undisturbed. A similar situation occurs upon exposure of cells to artificial light for 12 to 18 hr, however, the slow elimination of granules from the cells under these conditions does not result in the formation of a pigmented "capsule." The possible mechanisms of these reactions are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
ABSTRACT: Paragangliomas are rare neoplasms arising from undifferentiated cells of the primitive neural crest. We report a case of a 57-year-old patient with renal pigmented paraganglioma that was an incidental finding. Histopathological examination showed typical morphology of paraganglioma, as well as the unusual feature of large amounts of pigment in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells which was confirmed by bleached Fontana-Masson. Electron microscopy showed abundant, pleomorphic electron-dense granules consistent with neuromelanin. The tumor cells were positive for CD56 and chromogranin A, negative for HMB-45. The unique morphologic appearance represents divergent differentiation from neural crest. To our knowledge, the present case represents the first example of pigmented paraganglioma of the kidney. Virtual slides The virtual slide(s) for this article can be found here: http://www.diagnosticpathology.diagnomx.eu/vs/2017147293711495.  相似文献   

12.
Cranial neural crest cells from chick embryos, when cultured under appropriate conditions, differentiate after approx. 1 week into pigmented cells. Neurol crest cells were infested with a mutant (RSV-BH-Ta) of the Bryan 'high titer' strain of Rous sarcoma virus on the second day of culture before the cells were morphologically differentiated, or later after they became pigmented. Cells infected and maintained at the temperature permissive for transformation (37 degrees C) proliferated rapidly compared to uninfected cells are produced extensive cytoplasmic vacuoles in a fashion similar to other types of cells transformed with RSV-BH-Ta at 37 degrees C. Cells infected and maintained at the non-permissive temperature for transformation (41 degrees C) also proliferated rapidly but did not become morphologically transformed. Transformation occurred reversibly following a shift of temperature. Infection of morphologically undifferentiated neural crest cells at either temperature prevented their differentiation into pigment cells, and infection of pigmented neural crest cells at either temperature led to a gradual loss of pigmentation. These results suggest that even at the non-permissive temperature the virus may regulate the state of differentiation of certain types of cells.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Pigment cells are one of many cell types derived from the neural crest. This review focuses on the mechanisms that control the timing and pathways of migration of pigment cells into the epidermis and determinants that control the differentiation of pigment cells. Several factors may control the timing and pattern of pigment cell migration in the dorsolateral space including the loss of inhibitory molecules in the pathway, the appearance of chemotactic molecules emanating from the dispersing dermatome, and the differentiation of pigment cells, which may be the only neural crest derivative capable of utilizing the substratum found in the dorsolateral path Control of pigment cell differentiation remains controversial. A working model presented in this review suggests that multipotent neural crest cells that disperse ventrally upon separation from the neural tube preserve neurogenic ability and lose melanogenic ability, whereas those cells that are arrested at the entrance to the dorsolateral path lose neurogenic ability so that the population becomes primarily melanogenic. During the time that the latter population is arrested in migration it is speculated that the neural crest cells are exposed to an environment comprised of specific extracellular matrix molecules and/or growth factors that enhance pigment cell differentiation.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Many of the factors and mechanisms guiding the migration/differentiation of neural crest cells that give rise to a number of distinguishable cell types, including all dermal and epidermal pigment cells, remain unknown. The axolotl possesses three pigment cell types that differentiate according to specific developmentally programmed sequences and contribute to pigment pattern in the adult. A single lineage of the crest that becomes restricted to one of three pigment cell types gives us the opportunity to examine the existence of a neural crest stem cell population and the potential for transdifferentiation events. Interpretations of experiments involving drug-treated and mutant axolotls implicate cellular plasticity leading to observed phenotypes. We present results from recent in vitro studies designed to identify parameters influencing differentiation events of individual neural crest-derived pigment cell lineages. We demonstrate that the differentiation of xanthophores is enhanced, while that of the melanophores are inhibited in guanosine-supplemented neural crest cell cultures. Data suggest that the increase in one pigment cell population is at the expense of another, indicative of cellular plasticity. Videomicroscopy used in this study agrees with an abundance of correlative evidence supporting the hypothesis of transdifferentiation events among neural crest-derived pigment cell populations. The embryonic neural crest-derived pigment cell system is an ideal model to study differentiation of multipotential stem cells that play critical roles in patterning.  相似文献   

17.
When early embryonic quail neural tubes are dissected free from surrounding tissues and placed in culture, small stellate neural crest cells usually migrate from the explant onto the substratum. This outgrowth has been reported to consist of a mixture of cells, some of which undergo melanogenesis, while the rest remain unpigmented. We have, in contrast to earlier observations, obtained a spatial separation of the two phenotypes. In these cultures the primary outgrowth of migrating cells remained almost free of pigment-forming cells, whereas small spherical clusters containing several hundred pigment-forming cells appeared on the explanted neural tubes. Whether the clusters remained with the tube explants or were subcultured, all cluster cells differentiated into melanocytes. Prior to melanogenesis, the appearance of the cultured cells from a cluster was indistinguishable from the cells in the outgrowth. The clusters provide a source of neural crest cells, that (1) can be easily obtained in comparatively large numbers, (2) is not contaminated with any other cell type, (3) can be isolated before the onset of differentiation, and (4) is developmentally homogeneous. Thus, the cluster population is well suited for many types of experiments, such as the identification of specific environmental factors that might control neural crest cell differentiation.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Dissociated cells of brains (tel- and diencephalons) of 3.5-day-old chick embryos were cultivated in vitro under the cell culture conditions which are known to be permissive for neural retinal cells (NR cells) to transdifferentiate into lens and/or pigmented epithelial cells (PE cells). The differentiation of lentoid bodies (LBs) with lens-specific (δ-crystallin and PE cells with melanin granules was observed in such brain cultures.
LBs appeared in two different phases, i. e., 2–3 days and 16–30 days of cultivation, and after 40 days of culture these structures were formed in all 60 culture dishes. Sometimes, LBs were observed in foci of PE cells formed during earlier stages of brain cultures. When similar brain cultures were prepared with older embryos of 5-, 8.5-, 14-, and 16-days of incubation, no differentiation of lens and PE cells was observed.  相似文献   

20.
The Patch (Ph) mutation in mice is a deletion of the gene encoding the platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha subunit (PDGFR alpha). Patch is a recessive lethal recognized in heterozygotes by its effect on the pattern of neural crest-derived pigment cells, and in homozygous mutant embryos by visible defects in craniofacial structures. Since both pigment cells and craniofacial structures are derived from the neural crest, we have examined the differentiation of other crest cell-derived structures in Ph/Ph mutants to assess which crest cell populations are adversely affected by this mutation. Defects were found in many structures populated by non-neuronal derivatives of cranial crest cells including the thymus, the outflow tract of the heart, cornea, and teeth. In contrast, crest-derived neurons in both the head and trunk appeared normal. The expression pattern of PDGFR alpha mRNA was determined in normal embryos and was compared with the defects present in Ph/Ph embryos. PDGFR alpha mRNA was expressed at high levels in the non-neuronal derivatives of the cranial neural crest but was not detected in the crest cell neuronal derivatives. These results suggest that functional PDGF alpha is required for the normal development of many non-neuronal crest-derived structures but not for the development of crest-derived neuronal structures. Abnormal development of the non-neuronal crest cells in Ph/Ph embryos was also correlated with an increase in the diameter of the proteoglycan-containing granules within the crest cell migratory spaces. This change in matrix structure was observed both before and after crest cells had entered these spaces. Taken together, these observations suggest that functional PDGFR alpha can affect crest development both directly, by acting as a cell growth and/or survival stimulus for populations of non-neurogenic crest cells, and indirectly, by affecting the structure of the matrix environment through which such cells move.  相似文献   

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