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1.
We have examined the distribution in Xenopus embryos of beta 1 subunits of integrin, as recognized by cross-reactive antibodies against the avian integrin beta 1 subunit. These antibodies recognize a doublet of bands of approximately 120 kD in Xenopus embryos. The distribution pattern of these integrin cell surface receptors was compared with that of two possible ligands, fibronectin and laminin, in the extracellular matrix during the time of neural crest cell migration. Integrin immunoreactivity in the early neurula was observed lightly outlining somite and epidermal cells and the notochord. The integrin immunostaining increased with developmental age and was observed on most cell types in the embryo but was particularly notable in the intersomitic clefts through which motoraxons grow. The immunoreactivity in this region was not, however, wholly on the axon surfaces, since intersomitic integrin remained detectable in embryos in which the neural tube had been ablated. Fibronectin and laminin were more extensively distributed than integrin at all stages examined. Immunoreactivity for both was observed around the neural tube, notochord, somites, epidermis, dorsal mesentery, and lateral plate mesoderm. The distribution of laminin and fibronectin around the somites was particularly interesting since it was non-uniform and similar to that of integrin. Strongest staining was observed in the intersomitic clefts, and weakest staining was observed on the medial surface of the somites, which faces the neural tube and notochord. The major differences in distribution pattern between the fibronectin and laminin immunoreactivities were that only fibronectin was detected in the mesenchyme of the dorsal fin. Our results demonstrate that a molecule homologous to avian integrin is present in Xenopus embryos during neural crest cell migration and motoraxon outgrowth. Its presence in the intersomitic clefts and on the surface of many embryonic cell types together with the abundant distribution of its ligands are consistent with a potentially important developmental function in neurite outgrowth and/or muscle development.  相似文献   

2.
During neurite elongation in the developing peripheral nervous system, the distribution of laminin and fibronectin may provide preferred substrates for neurite elongation. In this study, the response of sensory neurites and growth cones to patterns of laminin or fibronectin applied to a background substrate of Type IV collagen was studied to determine any possible substrate preference. Neurites exhibited elongation restricted to a laminin pattern, but not a fibronectin pattern, indicating that sensory neurites prefer to elongate on laminin compared to Type IV collagen. When polylysine is included in the background substrate, neurite preference for laminin is decreased. Laminin also enhances neurite elongation and defasciculation and stabilizes growth cone protrusions. These results suggest an adhesive as well as a cytoskeletal involvement in the response to laminin, but direct adhesion estimates indicate that laminin decreases overall adhesion, arguing against an adhesive involvement. Regardless of the mechanism involved, the observed neurite preference for laminin is consistent with the hypothesis that spatial and temporal laminin distributions provide preferred pathways for peripheral neurite elongation.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The distribution of fibronectin and laminin was determined in the basement membrane surrounding the caudal neural tube and at the site of initial apposition of the caudal neural folds by means of indirect immunofluorescence histochemistry on 9.0- to 10.5-day mouse embryos fixed in Carnoy's solution and serially sectioned in paraffin. At early phases of development of normal (+/+) and abnormal (vl/vl) embryos the dorsolateral neural basement membrane overlying putative neural crest cells caudal to the hindlimb shows a patchy fibronectin reaction, with laminin virtually absent. In older embryos, both components are present but are discontinuous overlying the neural crest. The results suggest that since discontinuities occur in the basement membrane of abnormal as well as normal embryos, the neural crest cells are not prevented from emigrating from the abnormal neural tube; thus the faulty neural fold fusion that characterizesvl/vl embryos does not appear to be due to a suppression of emigration by the basement membrane. The results also demonstrate the advantages and reliability of embedding in paraffin for analysis of serially sectioned pathological material by means of indirect immunofluorescence, provided that normal controls and abnormals are processed simultaneously.  相似文献   

4.
The sequential appearance of the extracellular matrix (ECM) protein, cytotactin, was examined during development of the chicken embryo by immunohistochemical techniques. Although cytotactin was identified as a molecule that mediates glia-neuron interactions, preliminary immunohistochemical localization of the molecule suggested that it was an ECM protein with a widespread but nonetheless more restricted distribution than either fibronectin or laminin. In the present study, it was found that cytotactin is first present in the gastrulating chicken embryo. It appears later in the basement membrane of the developing neural tube and notochord in a temporal sequence beginning in the cephalic regions and proceeding caudally. Between 2 and 3 d of development, the molecule is present at high levels in the early neural crest pathways (surrounding the neural tube and somites) but, in contrast to fibronectin and laminin, is not found in the lateral plate mesoderm or ectoderm. At later times, cytotactin is expressed extensively in the central nervous system, in lesser amounts in the peripheral nervous system, and in a number of nonneural sites, most prominently in all smooth muscles and in basement membranes of lung and kidney. Cytotactin appears in adult tissues with distributions that are similar to those seen in embryonic tissues. The findings raise the possibility that certain ECM proteins contribute to pattern formation in embryogenesis as a result of their restricted expression in a spatiotemporally regulated fashion at some sites but not at others.  相似文献   

5.
Neural crest cell migratory pathways in the trunk of the chick embryo   总被引:15,自引:1,他引:14  
Neural crest cells migrate during embryogenesis to give rise to segmented structures of the vertebrate peripheral nervous system: namely, the dorsal root ganglia and the sympathetic chain. However, neural crest cell arise from the dorsal neural tube where they are apparently unsegmented. It is generally agreed that the somites impose segmentation on migrating crest cells, but there is a disagreement about two basic questions: exactly pathways do neural crest cells use to move through or around somites, and do neural crest cells actively migrate or are they passively dispersed by the movement of somite cells? The answers to both questions are critically important to any further understanding of the mechanisms underlying the precise distribution of the neural crest cells that develop into ganglia. We have done an exhaustive study of the locations of neural crest cells in chick embryos during early stages of their movement, using antibodies to neural crest cells (HNK-1), to neural filament-associated protein in growing nerve processes (E/C8), and to the extracellular matrix molecule laminin. Our results show that Some neural crest cells invade the extracellular space between adjacent somites, but the apparent majority move into the somites themselves along the border between the dermatome/myotome (DM) and the sclerotome. Neural crest cells remain closely associated with the anterior half of the DM of developing somites as they travel, suggesting that the basal lamina of the DM may be used as a migratory substratum. Supporting this idea is our observation that the development of the DM basal lamina coincides in time and location with the onset of crest migration through the somite. The leading front of neural crest cells advance through the somite while the length of the DM pathway remains constant, suggesting active locomotion, at least in this early phase of development. Neural crest cells leave the DM at a later stage of development to associate with the dorsal aorta, where sympathetic ganglia form, and to associate with newly emerging fibers of the ventral root nerve, where they presumably give rise to neuronal supportive cells. Thus we propose that the establishment of the segmental pattern of the peripheral ganglia and nerves depends on the timely development of appropriate substrata to guide and distribute migrating neural crest cells during the early stages of embryogenesis.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of the neural tube on early development of neural crest cells into sensory ganglia was studied in the chick embryo. Silastic membranes were implanted between the neural tube and the somites in 30-somite-stage embryos at the level of somites 21-24, thus separating the early migrated population of neural crest cells from the neural tube. Neural crest cells and peripheral ganglia were visualized by immunofluorescence using the HNK-1 monoclonal antibody and several histochemical techniques. Separation of crest cells from the neural tube caused the selective death of the neural crest cells from which dorsal root ganglia (DRG) would have developed. Complete disappearance of HNK-1 positive cells was evident already 10 hr after silastic implantation, before early differentiation sensory neurons could have reached their peripheral targets. In older embryos, DRG were absent at the level of implantation. In contrast, the development of ventral roots, sympathetic ganglia and adrenal gland was normal, and so was somitic differentiation into cartilage and muscle, while morphogenesis of the vertebrae was perturbed. To overcome the experimentally induced crest cell death, the silastic membranes were impregnated with a 3-day-old embryonic chick neural tube extract. Under these conditions, crest cells which were separated from the tube survived for a period of 30 hr after operation, compared to less than 10 hr in respective controls. The extract of another tissue, the liver, did not protract survival of DRG progenitor cells. Among the cells which survived with neural tube extract, some even succeeded in extending neurites; nevertheless, in absence of normal connections with the central nervous system (CNS) they finally died. Treatment of silastic implanted embryos with nerve growth factor (NGF) did not prevent the experimentally induced crest cell death. These results demonstrate that DRG develop from a population of neural crest cells which depends for its survival and probably for its differentiation upon a signal arising from the CNS, needed as early as the first hours after initiation of migration. Recovery experiments suggest that the subpopulation of crest cells which will develop along the sensory pathway probably depends for its survival and/or differentiation upon a factor contained in the neural tube, which is different from NGF.  相似文献   

7.
Distribution of laminin and collagens during avian neural crest development   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The distribution of type I, III and IV collagens and laminin during neural crest development was studied by immunofluorescence labelling of early avian embryos. These components, except type III collagen, were present prior to both cephalic and trunk neural crest appearance. Type I collagen was widely distributed throughout the embryo in the basement membranes of epithelia as well as in the extracellular spaces associated with mesenchymes. Type IV collagen and laminin shared a common distribution primarily in the basal surfaces of epithelia and in close association with developing nerves and muscle. In striking contrast with the other collagens and laminin, type III collagen appeared secondarily during embryogenesis in a restricted pattern in connective tissues. The distribution and fate of laminin and type I and IV collagens could be correlated spatially and temporally with morphogenetic events during neural crest development. Type IV collagen and lamin disappeared from the basal surface of the neural tube at sites where neural crest cells were emerging. During the course of neural crest cell migration, type I collagen was particularly abundant along migratory pathways whereas type IV collagen and laminin were distributed in the basal surfaces of the epithelia lining these pathways but were rarely seen in large amounts among neural crest cells. In contrast, termination of neural crest cell migration and aggregation into ganglia were correlated in many cases with the loss of type I collagen and with the appearance of type IV collagen and laminin among the neural crest population. Type III collagen was not observed associated with neural crest cells during their development. These observations suggest that laminin and both type I and IV collagens may be involved with different functional specificities during neural crest ontogeny. (i) Type I collagen associated with fibronectins is a major component of the extracellular spaces of the young embryo. Together with other components, it may contribute to the three-dimensional organization and functions of the matrix during neural crest cell migration. (ii) Type III collagen is apparently not required for tissue remodelling and cell migration during early embryogenesis. (iii) Type IV collagen and laminin are important components of the basal surface of epithelia and their distribution is consistent with tissue remodelling that occurs during neural crest cell emigration and aggregation into ganglia.  相似文献   

8.
In this study we determined the ultrastructural distribution of the various components of the extracellular matrix (laminin, fibronectin, Type I, III, and IV collagens) of the normal peripheral nerve in adult rat. The localization of these macromolecules was investigated in basement membranes as well as in different areas of epi-, peri-, and endoneurium, by use of a pre-embedding immunoperoxidase method.  相似文献   

9.
Cell attachment and neurite outgrowth by embryonic neural retinal cells were measured in separate quantitative assays to define differences in substrate preference and to demonstrate developmentally regulated changes in cellular response to different extracellular matrix glycoproteins. Cells attached to laminin, fibronectin, and collagen IV in a concentration-dependent fashion, though fibronectin was less effective for attachment than the other two substrates. Neurite outgrowth was much more extensive on laminin than on fibronectin or collagen IV. These results suggest that different substrates have distinct effects on neuronal differentiation. Neural retinal cell attachment and neurite outgrowth were inhibited on all three substrates by two antibodies, cell substratum attachment antibody (CSAT) and JG22, which recognize a cell surface glycoprotein complex required for cell interactions with several extracellular matrix constituents. In addition, retinal cells grew neurites on substrates coated with the CSAT antibodies. These results suggest that cell surface molecules recognized by this antibody are directly involved in cell attachment and neurite extension. Neural retinal cells from embryos of different ages varied in their capacity to interact with extracellular matrix substrates. Cells of all ages, embryonic day 6 (E6) to E12, attached to collagen IV and CSAT antibody substrates. In contrast, cell attachment to laminin and fibronectin diminished with increasing embryonic age. Age-dependent differences were found in the profile of proteins precipitated by the CSAT antibody, raising the possibility that modifications of these proteins are responsible for the dramatic changes in substrate preference of retinal cells between E6 and E12.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated the distribution of type I collagen, tenascin, and laminin in younger chick embryos than have previously been studied in detail. The initial appearance of type I collagen, but not tenascin and laminin, is exactly correlated with the beginning of neural crest migration, suggesting a role for collagen I in the migration. Light microscopy of whole mounts of 2-day-old chick embryos reveals that type I collagen is expressed in a rostral to caudal gradient; it localizes to the notochord sheath before accumulating around the neural tube and somites. Collagen I and tenascin also associate with central somite cells. Surprisingly, no extracellular matrix can be detected among the early sclerotomal cells, which suggests that little or no cell migration is involved in this epithelial-mesenchymal transformation. Electron microscopy using peroxidase antiperoxidase reveals that tenascin is present in nonstriated, 10 nm wide fibrils and in interstitial bodies, both of which have previously been reported to contain fibronectin. However, collagen I only occurs in the 10 nm fibrils and larger striated fibrils. This is the first ultrastructural study to assign tenascin to fibrils and interstitial bodies and to describe its appearance and disappearance from embryonic basement membranes. The discussion emphasizes the possible importance of type I collagen in neural crest cell migration and compares the ultrastructural associations of the ECM molecules present at this early embryonic stage.  相似文献   

11.
Fibronectin and laminin have been found in the extracellular matrix and in the basement membrane of sea urchin embryos during early development. These glycoproteins are also found on the cell surfaces of the outer epithelial layer and on the secondary mesenchyme cells within the blastocoel. The similarity of functions of the extracellular matrix and basement membrane is discussed, as is the similarity of their molecular components. These observations suggest the possibility that fibronectin and laminin form a continuous matrix surrounding the cells which links the outer ECM (hyaline layer) to the inner ECM (basement membrane). Such a network could coordinate the various activities of the embryo during early morphogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
The neuronal cell population of lumbosacral sympathetic ganglia from 7-day-old chick embryos is characterized by a high proportion of cells with the ability to proliferate in culture (Rohrer and Thoenen, 1987). It is now demonstrated that neither proliferation nor survival of these neurons depend on the presence of nerve growth factor (NGF). However, neuronal survival did depend on the culture substrate used: on laminin, E7 neurons survived and their number increased due to proliferation, whereas on fibronectin (FN) or a substrate of molecules from heart cell-conditioned medium (HCM) a significant number of the cells died during early culture periods. Less than 70 and 50% of the number of neurons surviving on a laminin substrate were found on FN and HCM, respectively, after 3 days in culture. Although NGF did not affect neuronal survival, a small increase in neurite extension on these substrates was observed in the presence of NGF. Furthermore, although NGF did not prevent neuronal death after extended culture periods, this could be prevented by elevated extracellular potassium concentrations. Sympathetic neurons of E8 chick embryos however showed a strikingly different response to NGF compared with those of E7: whereas neuronal survival on laminin was not influenced by NGF, a significant effect of NGF on survival and on neurite extension was observed for E8 neurons on a HCM substrate. In contrast to cells from E7 and E8 embryos, the majority of neurons from E11 chick embryos required NGF for survival even on a laminin substrate as described previously (D. Edgar, R. Timpl, and H. Thoenen, 1984, EMBO J. 3, 1463-1468). These results demonstrate that while sympathetic neurons from E7 chick embryos do not depend on the soluble neurotrophic factor NGF for survival in vitro, they are dependent on molecules of the extracellular matrix. With increasing age, the survival requirements demonstrated in vitro change toward the classical pattern of NGF dependency. Low amounts of laminin-like immunoreactivity were shown to be present in sympathetic ganglia of E7 chick embryos which were then shown to increase as development proceeded. These data indicate that laminin may play a role in the survival and development of chick sympathetic neurons not only in vitro, but also in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Many significant human birth defects originate around the time of neural tube closure or early during post-closure nervous system development. For example, failure of the neural tube to close generates anencephaly and spina bifida, faulty cell cycle progression is implicated in primary microcephaly, while defective migration of neuroblasts can lead to neuronal migration disorders such as lissencephaly. At the stage of neural tube closure, basement membranes are becoming organised around the neuroepithelium, and beneath the adjacent non-neural surface ectoderm. While there is circumstantial evidence to implicate basement membrane dynamics in neural tube and surface ectodermal development, we have an incomplete understanding of the molecular composition of basement membranes at this stage. In the present study, we examined the developing basement membranes of the mouse embryo at mid-gestation (embryonic day 9.5), with particular reference to laminin composition. We performed in situ hybridization to detect the mRNAs of all eleven individual laminin chains, and immunohistochemistry to identify which laminin chains are present in the basement membranes. From this information, we inferred the likely laminin variants and their tissues of origin: that is, whether a given basement membrane laminin is contributed by epithelium, mesenchyme, or both. Our findings reveal major differences in basement composition along the body axis, with the rostral neural tube (at mandibular arch and heart levels) exhibiting many distinct laminin variants, while the lumbar level where the neural tube is just closing shows a much simpler laminin profile. Moreover, there appears to be a marked difference in the extent to which the mesenchyme contributes laminin variants to the basement membrane, with potential contribution of several laminins rostrally, but no contribution caudally. This information paves the way towards a mechanistic analysis of basement membrane laminin function during early neural tube development in mammals.  相似文献   

14.
The deposition of the basement membrane glycoproteins, laminin, fibronectin, and type IV procollagen was studied by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy during the attachment and differentiation of murine C-1300 neuroblastoma cells. A typical cytoplasmic perinuclear staining for the basement membrane antigens was seen both in undifferentiated and differentiated cells. Freshly seeded suspended cells lacked surface fluorescence but in two hours after plating, distinct punctate laminin deposits became discernible on the ventral surface of the cells. Notably, in sparsely seeded undifferentiated cultures, the cell-associated extracellular laminin deposits could only be detected under the primary attaching cells, whereas daughter cells in clonal cell colonies lacked such fluorescence. In cultures induced to neurite formation with dibutyryl cyclic AMP, laminin deposition was also detected in association with the growing cytoplasmic extensions. No distinct differences were found between the secreted proteins of cultures of differentiated and nondifferentiated neuroblastoma cells, but the patterns of fucosylation of high-molecular weight proteins in the two cultures were markedly different. We conclude that cultured neuroblastoma cells both synthesize, secrete and deposit laminin. The distribution of laminin during neuroblastoma cell attachment and neurite extension suggests that this glycoprotein may be involved in cell–to–substratum interactions in C-1300 cell cultures.  相似文献   

15.
The distribution pattern of the avian alpha 6 integrin subunit was examined during early stages of development. The results show that this subunit is prevalent in cells of the developing nervous system and muscle. alpha 6 is first observed on neuroepithelial cells of the cranial neural plate and trunk neural tube. With time, immunoreactivity becomes prominent near the lumen and ventrolateral portions of the neural tube, co-distributing with neurons and axons, particularly notable on commissural neurons. The alpha 6 expression pattern is dynamic in the neural tube, with immunoreactivity peaking by embryonic day 6 (stage 30) and decreasing thereafter. The ventral roots and retina exhibit high levels of immunoreactivity throughout development. In the peripheral nervous system, alpha 6 immunoreactivity first appears on a subpopulation of sympathoadrenal cells around the dorsal aorta and later in the dorsal root ganglia shortly after gangliogenesis. Immunoreactivity appears on prospective myotomal cells as the somites delaminate into the dermomyotome and sclerotome, remaining prominent on myoblasts and differentiated muscle at all stages. The mesonephros also has intense immunoreactivity. In the periphery, alpha 6 immunoreactive regions often in proximity to laminin, which is thought to be the ligand of alpha 6 beta 1 integrin.  相似文献   

16.
The somatosensory nervous system is responsible for the transmission of a multitude of sensory information from specialized receptors in the periphery to the central nervous system. Sensory afferents can potentially be damaged at several sites: in the peripheral nerve; the dorsal root; or the dorsal columns of the spinal cord; and the success of regeneration depends on the site of injury. The regeneration of peripheral nerve branches following injury is relatively successful compared to central branches. This is largely attributed to the presence of neurotrophic factors and a Schwann cell basement membrane rich in permissive extracellular matrix (ECM) components which promote axonal regeneration in the peripheral nerve. Modulation of the ECM environment and/or neuronal integrins may enhance regenerative potential of sensory neurons following peripheral or central nerve injury or disease. This review describes the interactions between integrins and ECM molecules (particularly the growth supportive ligands, laminin, and fibronectin; and the growth inhibitory chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs)) during development and regeneration of sensory neurons following physical injury or neuropathy.  相似文献   

17.
Calmodulin (CaM) is a major calcium-binding protein in the brain, where its immunoreactivity is mainly localized in the neurons. In this study, ontogenical changes in the distribution of CaM in the nervous system of mouse embryos were investigated immunohistochemically using a specific antibody against CaM and an indirect immunoenzyme method. Immunoreactive staining was first observed in the marginal layer of the cranial neural tube after 9.5 days of gestation; thereafter, the amount of stained structures increased rapidly. Particularly intense staining was observed in the long neuronal processes extending from or into the brain and spinal cord primordia. Intense immunostaining was also observed in the optic nerve layer of early retinae from 12.5 days of gestation. The appearance of CaM immunoreactivity is thus an early event during neuronal differentiation, apparently concomitant with the initiation of axon extension and the appearance of neurofilament proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Calmodulin (CaM) is a major calcium-binding protein in the brain, where its immunoreactivity is mainly localized in the neurons. In this study, ontogenical changes in the distribution of CaM in the nervous system of mouse embryos were investigated immunohistochemically using a specific antibody against CaM and an indirect immunoenzyme method. Immunoreactive staining was first observed in the marginal layer of the cranial neural tube after 9.5 days of gestation; thereafter, the amount of stained structures increased rapidly. Particularly intense staining was observed in the long neuronal processes extending from or into the brain and spinal cord primordia. Intense immunostaining was also observed in the optic nerve layer of early retinae from 12.5 days of gestation. The appearance of CaM immunoreactivity is thus an early event during neuronal differentiation, apparently concominant with the initiation of axon extension and the appearance of neurofilament proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Neural cell adhesion molecule expression in Xenopus embryos   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The spatiotemporal pattern of expression of the neural cell adhesion molecule NCAM was mapped immunohistochemically in embryos of the frog Xenopus, from blastula to early swimming stages, using a polyclonal antibody that recognizes Xenopus NCAM. The neural plate stage was the earliest at which NCAM could be detected. The initial sites of NCAM immunoreactivity were neural ectoderm, somitic mesoderm, and chordamesoderm. During formation of the neural tube, NCAM immunoreactivity became restricted to the neuroectoderm and its derivatives. During closure of the neural tube and for 2-4 hr thereafter, NCAM was expressed in a distinctive radial pattern in coronal sections of the neural tube. NCAM was observed in neural crest cells before migration and after formation of cranial and spinal ganglia. During the period of initial neurite outgrowth, NCAM became concentrated in the developing central nerve fiber pathways. NCAM was seen on peripheral nerves from the time of their initial outgrowth and it was strongly expressed at neuromuscular junctions during the period of their formation. These results show that NCAM is expressed after neural induction and functions during morphogenesis of the neural plate and tube, some neural crest derivatives, development of nerve fiber tracts, and formation of neuromuscular connections.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The distribution of FMRFamide-like immunoreactive neurons in the nervous system of the slug Limax maximus was studied using immunohistochemical methods. Approximately one thousand FMRFamide-like immunoreactive cell bodies were found in the central nervous system. Ranging between 15 m and 200 m in diameter, they were found in all 11 ganglia of the central nervous system. FMRFamide-like immunoreactive cell bodies were also found at peripheral locations on buccal nerve roots. FMRFamide-like immunoreactive nerve fibres were present in peripheral nerve roots and were distributed extensively throughout the neuropil and cell body regions of the central ganglia. They were also present in the connective tissue of the perineurium, forming an extensive network of varicose fibres. The large number, extensive distribution and great range in size of FMRFamide-like immunoreactive cell bodies and the wide distribution of immunoreactive fibres suggest that FMRFamide-like peptides might serve several different functions in the nervous system of the slug.  相似文献   

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