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1.
While they are migrating caudally along the developing gut, around 10%-20% of enteric neural crest-derived cells start to express pan-neuronal markers and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). We used explants of gut from embryonic TH-green fluorescence protein (GFP) mice and time-lapse microscopy to examine whether these immature enteric neurons migrate and their mode of migration. In the gut of E10.5 and E11.5 TH-GFP mice, around 50% of immature enteric neurons (GFP(+) cells) migrated, with an average speed of around 15 mum/h. This is slower than the speed at which the population of enteric neural crest-derived cells advances along the developing gut, and hence neuronal differentiation seems to slow, but not necessarily halt, the caudal migration of enteric neural crest cells. Most migrating immature enteric neurons migrated caudally by extending a long-leading process followed by translocation of the cell body. This mode of migration is different from that of non-neuronal enteric neural crest-derived cells and neural crest cells in other locations, but resembles that of migrating neurons in many regions of the developing central nervous system (CNS). In migrating immature enteric neurons, a swelling often preceded the movement of the nucleus in the direction of the leading process. However, the centrosomal marker, pericentrin, was not localized to either the leading process or swelling. This seems to be the first detailed report of neuronal migration in the developing mammalian peripheral nervous system.  相似文献   

2.
Neural crest cells leave the hindbrain, enter the gut mesenchyme at the pharynx, and migrate as strands of cells to the terminal bowel to form the enteric nervous system. We generated embryos containing fluorescent enteric neural crest-derived cells (ENCCs) by mating Wnt1-Cre mice with Rosa-floxed-YFP mice and investigated ENCC behavior in the intact gut of mouse embryos using time-lapse fluorescent microscopy. With respect to the entire gut, we have found that ENCCs in the cecum and proximal colon behave uniquely. ENCCs migrating caudally through either the ileum, or caudal colon, are gradually advancing populations of strands displaying largely unpredictable local trajectories. However, in the cecum, advancing ENCCs pause for approximately 12 h, and then display an invariable pattern of migration to distinct regions of the cecum and proximal colon. In addition, while most ENCCs migrating through other regions of the gut remain interconnected as strands; ENCCs initially migrating through the cecum and proximal colon fragment from the main population and advance as isolated single cells. These cells aggregate into groups isolated from the main network, and eventually extend strands themselves to reestablish a network in the mid-colon. As the advancing network of ENCCs reaches the terminal bowel, strands of sacral crest cells extend, and intersect with vagal crest to bridge the small space between. We found a relationship between ENCC number, interaction, and migratory behavior by utilizing endogenously isolated strands and by making cuts along the ENCC wavefront. Depending on the number of cells, the ENCCs aggregated, proliferated, and extended strands to advance the wavefront. Our results show that interactions between ENCCs are important for regulating behaviors necessary for their advancement.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The ENS resembles the brain and differs both physiologically and structurally from any other region of the PNS. Recent experiments in which crest cell migration has been studied with DiI, a replication-deficient retrovirus, or antibodies that label cells of neural crest origin, have confirmed that both the avian and mammalian bowel are colonized by émigrés from the sacral as well as the vagal level of the neural crest. Components of the extracellular matrix, such as laminin, may play roles in enteric neural and glial development. The observation that an overabundance of laminin develops in the presumptive aganglionic region of the gut in Is/Is mutant mice and is associated with the inability of crest-derived cells to colonize this region of the bowel has led to the hypothesis that laminin promotes the development of crest-derived cells as enteric neurons. Premature expression of a neuronal phenotype would cause crest-derived cells to cease migrating before they complete the colonization of the gut. The acquisition by crest-derived cells of a nonintegrin, nervespecific, 110 kD laminin-binding protein when they enter the bowel may enable these cells to respond to laminin differently from their pre-enteric migrating predecessors. Crest-derived cells migrating along the vagal pathway to the mammalian gut are transiently catecholaminergic (TC). This phenotype appears to be lost rapidly as the cells enter the bowel and begin to follow their program of terminal differentiation. The appearance and disappearance of TC cells may thus be an example of the effects of the enteric microenvironment on the differentiation of crest-derived cells in situ. Crest-derived cells can be isolated from the enteric microenvironment by immunoselection, a method that takes advantage of the selective expression on the surfaces of crest-derived cells of certain antigens. One neurotrophin, NT-3, promotes the development of enteric neurons and glia in vitro. Because trkC is expressed in the developing and mature gut, it seems likely that NT-3 plays a critical role in the development of the ENS in situ. Although the factors that are responsible for the development of the unique properties of the ENS remain unknown, progress made in understanding enteric neuronal development has recently accelerated. The application of new techniques and recently developed probes suggest that the accelerated pace of discovery in this area can be expected to continue. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
The technique of back-transplantation was used to investigate the developmental potential of neural crest-derived cells that have migrated to and colonized the avian bowel. Segments of quail bowel (removed at E4) were grafted between the somites and neural tube of younger (E2) chick host embryos. Grafts were placed at a truncal level, adjacent to somites 14-24. Initial experiments, done in vitro, confirmed that crest-derived cells are capable of migrating out of segments of foregut explanted at E4. The foregut, which at E4 has been colonized by cells derived from the vagal crest, served as the donor tissue. Comparative observations were made following grafts of control tissues, which included hindgut, lung primordia, mesonephros and limb bud. Additional experiments were done with chimeric bowel in which only the crest-derived cells were of quail origin. Targets in the host embryos colonized by crest-derived cells from the foregut grafts included the neural tube, spinal roots and ganglia, peripheral nerves, sympathetic ganglia and the adrenals, but not the gut. Donor cells in these target organs were immunostained by the monoclonal antibody, NC-1, indicating that they were crest-derived and developing along neural or glial lineages. Some of the crest-derived cells (NC-1-immunoreactive) that left the bowel and reached sympathetic ganglia, but not peripheral nerves or dorsal root ganglia, co-expressed tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity, a neural characteristic never expressed by crest-derived cells in the avian gut. None of the cells leaving enteric back-grafts produced pigment. Cells of mesodermal origin were also found to leave donor explants and aggregate in dermis and feather germs near the grafts. These observations indicate that crest-derived cells, having previously migrated to the bowel, retain the ability to migrate to distant sites in a younger embryo. The routes taken by these cells appear to reflect, not their previous migratory experience, but the level of the host embryo into which the graft is placed. Some of the population of crest-derived cells that leave the back-transplanted gut remain capable of expressing phenotypes that they do not express within the bowel in situ, but which are appropriate for the site in the host embryo to which they migrate.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Migratory cranial neural crest cells differentiate into a wide range of cell types, such as ectomesenchymal tissue (bone and connective tissues) ventrally in the branchial arches and neural tissue (neurons and glia) dorsally. We investigated spatial and temporal changes of migration and differentiation potential in neural crest populations derived from caudal midbrain and rhombomeres 1 and 2 by back-transplanting cells destined for the first branchial arch and trigeminal ganglion from HH8-HH19 quail into HH7-HH11 chicks. Branchial arch cells differentiated down ectomesenchymal lineages but largely lost both the ability to localize to the trigeminal position and neurogenic differentiation capacity by HH12-HH13, even before the arch is visible, and lost long distance migratory ability around HH17. In contrast, neural crest-derived cells from trigeminal ganglia lost ectomesechymal differentiation potential by HH17. Despite this, they retain the ability to migrate into the branchial arches until at least HH19. However, many of the neural crest-derived trigeminal ganglia cells in the branchial arch localized to the non-neural crest core of the arch from HH13 and older donors. These results suggest that long distance migration ability, finer scale localization, and lineage restriction may not be coordinately regulated in the cranial neural crest population.  相似文献   

8.
The neural crest is a multipotent, migratory cell population that contributes to a variety of tissues and organs during vertebrate embryogenesis. Here, we focus on the function of Msx1 and Msx2, homeobox genes implicated in several disorders affecting craniofacial development in humans. We show that Msx1/2 mutants exhibit profound deficiencies in the development of structures derived from the cranial and cardiac neural crest. These include hypoplastic and mispatterned cranial ganglia, dysmorphogenesis of pharyngeal arch derivatives and abnormal organization of conotruncal structures in the developing heart. The expression of the neural crest markers Ap-2alpha, Sox10 and cadherin 6 (cdh6) in Msx1/2 mutants revealed an apparent retardation in the migration of subpopulations of preotic and postotic neural crest cells, and a disorganization of neural crest cells paralleling patterning defects in cranial nerves. In addition, normally distinct subpopulations of migrating crest underwent mixing. The expression of the hindbrain markers Krox20 and Epha4 was altered in Msx1/2 mutants, suggesting that defects in neural crest populations may result, in part, from defects in rhombomere identity. Msx1/2 mutants also exhibited increased Bmp4 expression in migratory cranial neural crest and pharyngeal arches. Finally, proliferation of neural crest-derived mesenchyme was unchanged, but the number of apoptotic cells was increased substantially in neural crest-derived cells that contribute to the cranial ganglia and the first pharyngeal arch. This increase in apoptosis may contribute to the mispatterning of the cranial ganglia and the hypoplasia of the first arch.  相似文献   

9.
An increasing number of genes are known to show expression in the cranial neural crest area. So far it is very difficult to analyze their effect on neural crest cell migration because of the lack of transplantation techniques. This paper presents a simple method to study the migratory behavior of cranial neural crest cells by homo- and heterotopic transplantations: Green fluorescent protein (GFP) RNA was injected into one blastomere of Xenopus laevis embryos at the 2-cell stage. The cranial neural crest area of stage 14 embryos was transplanted into the head or trunk region of an uninjected host embryo, and the migration was monitored by GFP fluorescence. The transplants were further examined by double immunostaining and confocal microscopy to trace migratory routes inside the embryo, and to exclude contaminations of grafts with foreign tissues. Our results demonstrate that we developed a highly efficient and reproducible technique to study the migratory ability of cranial neural crest cells. It offers the possibility to analyze genes involved in neural crest cell migration by coinjecting their RNA with that of GFP. Received: 28 September 1999 / Accepted: 17 November 1999  相似文献   

10.
A critical step in immunologically mediated inflammation is the migration of T cells between endothelial cells of postcapillary venules and into the tissues. To determine whether specific cells are capable of transendothelial migration, T cells that had migrated through endothelial monolayers were retrieved and analyzed. To accomplish this, human umbilical vein endothelial cells (EC) were cultured to confluence on collagen gels and incubated with human T cells. T cells that were nonadherent to the EC, those that bound to the endothelium, and cells that had migrated through the endothelial monolayer and into the collagen were individually harvested and characterized. After a 4-h incubation with EC, T cells distributed themselves such that 77 +/- 2% were nonadherent, 13 +/- 2% were bound to EC, and 10 +/- 1% had migrated into the collagen. The CD4+ T cells that had migrated into the collagen were predominantly CD29bright/CD45RObright and CD45RA-. CD8+ T cells demonstrated a greater transendothelial migratory capacity than the CD4+ T cells. The migrated CD8+ T cells were mainly CD29bright but CD45RA+. Additional phenotypic analysis of the migrating cells indicated that they contained fewer cells that expressed L-selectin. Moreover the surface expression of CD7 was less dense in the T cells that had migrated than in the nonadherent T cells. Finally the T cells that migrated were not enriched for CD45RBdim T cells. Prolonging the incubation with EC to 36 h increased the number of T cells that migrated but did not alter the predominance of CD29bright T cells in the migrated population. Stimulation of EC with IL-1 or IFN-gamma also increased the number of adherent and migrating T cells, respectively, but did not alter the phenotype of the migrating cells. These results indicate that the capacity for transendothelial migration is an intrinsic ability of certain subpopulations of T cells and is related to their stage of differentiation as identified by their surface phenotype.  相似文献   

11.
In order to gain insight into the potential role of the enteric microenvironment in the neuronal determination of the neural crest-derived precursor cells of enteric neurons, an attempt was made to ascertain when and where along the migratory route of these cells that they first express neuronal properties. The immunocytochemical detection of the 160-kDa component of the triplet of the chick neurofilament peptides served as a neuronal marker. In addition, neurogenic potential was assessed by growing explants of tissue suspected of containing presumptive neuroblasts in culture or as grafts on the chorioallantoic membrane of chick embryonic hosts. Neurofilament immunoreactivity was first detected in the foregut by Day 4 of development and spread to the hindgut by Day 7. Within the hindgut, development was more advanced within the colorectum than within the more proximal terminal ileum and caecal appendages. This probably reflects the distal-proximal migration of sacral neural crest cells in the postumbilical bowel. The ability of enteric explants to show neuronal development in vitro correlated with whether or not cells containing neurofilament immunoreactivity had reached that segment of gut at the age of explantation. These data suggest that enteric neuronal precursors have already begun to differentiate as neurons by the time they colonize the gut. Prior to the appearance of fibrillar neurofilament immunoreactivity in the foregut, cells that express this marker were found transiently within the mesenchyme of branchial arches 3, 4, and 5. These cells had disappeared from this region by developmental Day 6. The neurogenic potential of branchial arches 3 and 4 was demonstrated by the correlation that was found between the ability of explants of these arches to show neuronal development in vitro and the presence within them of cells that display neurofilament immunoreactivity. No similar neurogenic potential was found in the more rostral branchial arches which lacked the masses of neurofilament-immunoreactive cells. The location of the caudal branchial arches below the migrating vagal neural crest, the transience of the neurofilament immunoreactivity in them, and the coincident transience of their neurogenic potential in vitro, suggested that the masses of neurofilament immunoreactive cells in the caudal branchial arches might be vagal neural crest-derived neuronal precursor cells en route to the pharynx and the rest of the gut. This possibility was supported by the observation of neurofilament immunoreactivity in a subset of cells of the premigratory and early migratory neural crest in the vagal, but not other, regions of the neuraxis prior to the appearance of neurofilament immunoreactivity in the branchial arches. Proliferative expansion of cells with neurofilament immunoreactivity was indicated by the observation of mitotic figures in them. It is suggested that the vagal neural crest cells that populate the ENS are already committed to the neuronal lineage while still in the vagal region of the neuraxis. It is therefore not likely that the enteric microenvironment plays a role in this process.  相似文献   

12.
In contrast to many vertebrates, the ventral body wall muscles and limb muscles of Xenopus develop at different times. The ventral body wall forms in the tadpole, while limb (appendicular) muscles form during metamorphosis to the adult frog. In organisms that have been examined thus far, a conserved mechanism has been shown to control migratory muscle precursor specification, migration, and differentiation. Here, we show that the process of ventral body wall formation in Xenopus laevis is similar to hypaxial muscle development in chickens and mice. Cells specified for the migratory lineage display an upregulation of pax3 in the ventro-lateral region of the somite. These pax3-positive cells migrate ventrally, away from the somite, and undergo terminal differentiation with the expression of myf-5, followed by myoD. Several other genes are selectively expressed in the migrating muscle precursor population, including neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), Xenopus kit related kinase (Xkrk1), and Xenopus SRY box 5 (sox5). We have also found that muscle precursor migration is highly coordinated with the migration of neural crest-derived melanophores. However, by extirpating neural crest at an early stage and allowing embryos to develop, we determined that muscle precursor migration is not dependent on physical or genetic interaction with melanophores.  相似文献   

13.
The chick ciliary ganglion is a neural crest-derived parasympathetic ganglion that innervates the eye. Here, we examine its axial level of origin and developmental relationship to other ganglia and nerves of the head. Using small, focal injections of DiI, we show that neural crest cells arising from both the caudal half of the midbrain and the rostral hindbrain contribute to the ciliary as well as the trigeminal ganglion. Precursors to both ganglia have overlapping migration patterns, moving first ventrolaterally and then rostrally toward the optic vesicle. At the level of the midbrain/forebrain junction, precursors to the ciliary ganglion separate from the main migratory stream, turn ventromedially, and condense in the vicinity of the rostral aorta and Rathke's pouch. Ciliary neuroblasts first exit the cell cycle at early E2, prior to and during ganglionic condensation, and neurogenesis continues through E5.5. By E3, markers of neuronal differentiation begin to appear in this population. By labeling the ectoderm with DiI, we discovered a new placode, caudal to the eye and possibly contiguous to the trigeminal placode, that contributes a few early differentiating neurons to the ciliary ganglion, oculomotor nerve, and connecting branches to the ophthalmic nerve. These results suggest for the first time a dual neural crest and placodal contribution to the ciliary ganglion and associated nerves.  相似文献   

14.
Neural crest cells that originate in the caudal hindbrain migrate into and along the developing gastrointestinal tract to form the enteric nervous system. While they are migrating, neural-crest-derived cells are also proliferating. Previous studies have shown that the expression of glial-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) and endothelin-3 is highest in the embryonic caecum, and that GDNF alone or in combination with endothelin-3 promotes the proliferation of enteric neural-crest-derived cells in vitro. However, whether neural proliferative zones, like those in the central nervous system, are found along the developing gut is unknown. We used a fluorescent nucleic acid stain to identify dividing cells or BrdU labelling (2 h after administration of BrdU to the mother), combined with antibodies specific to neural crest cells to determine the percentage of proliferating crest-derived cells in various gut regions of embryonic day 11.5 (E11.5) and E12.5 mice. The rate of proliferation of crest-derived cells did not vary significantly in different regions of the gut (including the caecum) or at different distances from the migratory wavefront of vagal crest-derived cells. The phenotype of mitotic enteric crest-derived cells was also examined. Cells expressing the pan-neuronal markers, neurofilament-M and Hu, or the glial marker, S100b, were observed undergoing mitosis. However, no evidence was found for proliferation of cells expressing neuron-type-specific markers, such as nitric oxide synthase (at E12.5) or calcitonin gene-related peptide (at E18.5). Thus, for enteric neurons, exit from the cell cycle appears to occur after the expression of pan-neuronal proteins but prior to the expression of markers of terminally differentiated neurons.This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (DP0345298) and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (Project grant 145628 and Senior Research Fellowship 170224).  相似文献   

15.
A sub-population of the neural crest is known to play a crucial role in development of the cardiac outflow tract. Studies in avians have mapped the complete migratory pathways taken by 'cardiac' neural crest cells en route from the neural tube to the developing heart. A cardiac neural crest lineage is also known to exist in mammals, although detailed information on its axial level of origin and migratory pattern are lacking. We used focal cell labelling and orthotopic grafting, followed by whole embryo culture, to determine the spatio-temporal migratory pattern of cardiac neural crest in mouse embryos. Axial levels between the post-otic hindbrain and somite 4 contributed neural crest cells to the heart, with the neural tube opposite somite 2 being the most prolific source. Emigration of cardiac neural crest from the neural tube began at the 7-somite stage, with cells migrating in pathways dorsolateral to the somite, medial to the somite, and between somites. Subsequently, cardiac neural crest cells migrated through the peri-aortic mesenchyme, lateral to the pharynx, through pharyngeal arches 3, 4 and 6, and into the aortic sac. Colonisation of the outflow tract mesenchyme was detected at the 32-somite stage. Embryos homozygous for the Sp2H mutation show delayed onset of cardiac neural crest emigration, although the pathways of subsequent migration resembled wild type. The number of neural crest cells along the cardiac migratory pathway was significantly reduced in Sp2H/Sp2H embryos. To resolve current controversy over the cell autonomy of the splotch cardiac neural crest defect, we performed reciprocal grafts of premigratory neural crest between wild type and splotch embryos. Sp2H/Sp2H cells migrated normally in the +/+ environment, and +/+ cells migrated normally in the Sp2H/Sp2H environment. In contrast, retarded migration along the cardiac route occurred when either Sp2H/+ or Sp2H/Sp2H neural crest cells were grafted into the Sp2H/Sp2H environment. We conclude that the retardation of cardiac neural crest migration in splotch mutant embryos requires the genetic defect in both neural crest cells and their migratory environment.  相似文献   

16.
The vagal neural crest is the origin of majority of neurons and glia that constitute the enteric nervous system, the intrinsic innervation of the gut. We have recently confirmed that a second region of the neuraxis, the sacral neural crest, also contributes to the enteric neuronal and glial populations of both the myenteric and the submucosal plexuses in the chick, caudal to the level of the umbilicus. Results from this previous study showed that sacral neural crest-derived precursors colonised the gut in significant numbers only 4 days after vagal-derived cells had completed their migration along the entire length of the gut. This observation suggested that in order to migrate into the hindgut and differentiate into enteric neurons and glia, sacral neural crest cells may require an interaction with vagal-derived cells or with factors or signalling molecules released by them or their progeny. This interdependence may also explain the inability of sacral neural crest cells to compensate for the lack of ganglia in the terminal hindgut of Hirschsprung's disease in humans or aganglionic megacolon in animals. To investigate the possible interrelationship between sacral and vagal-derived neural crest cells within the hindgut, we mapped the contribution of various vagal neural crest regions to the gut and then ablated appropriate sections of chick vagal neural crest to interrupt the migration of enteric nervous system precursor cells and thus create an aganglionic hindgut model in vivo. In these same ablated animals, the sacral level neural axis was removed and replaced with the equivalent tissue from quail embryos, thus enabling us to document, using cell-specific antibodies, the migration and differentiation of sacral crest-derived cells. Results showed that the vagal neural crest contributed precursors to the enteric nervous system in a regionalised manner. When quail-chick grafts of the neural tube adjacent to somites 1-2 were performed, neural crest cells were found in enteric ganglia throughout the preumbilical gut. These cells were most numerous in the esophagus, sparse in the preumbilical intestine, and absent in the postumbilical gut. When similar grafts adjacent to somites 3-5 or 3-6 were carried out, crest cells were found within enteric ganglia along the entire gut, from the proximal esophagus to the distal colon. Vagal neural crest grafts adjacent to somites 6-7 showed that crest cells from this region were distributed along a caudal-rostral gradient, being most numerous in the hindgut, less so in the intestine, and absent in the proximal foregut. In order to generate aneural hindgut in vivo, it was necessary to ablate the vagal neural crest adjacent to somites 3-6, prior to the 13-somite stage of development. When such ablations were performed, the hindgut, and in some cases also the cecal region, lacked enteric ganglionated plexuses. Sacral neural crest grafting in these vagal neural crest ablated chicks showed that sacral cells migrated along normal, previously described hindgut pathways and formed isolated ganglia containing neurons and glia at the levels of the presumptive myenteric and submucosal plexuses. Comparison between vagal neural crest-ablated and nonablated control animals demonstrated that sacral-derived cells migrated into the gut and differentiated into neurons in higher numbers in the ablated animals than in controls. However, the increase in numbers of sacral neural crest-derived neurons within the hindgut did not appear to be sufficiently high to compensate for the lack of vagal-derived enteric plexuses, as ganglia containing sacral neural crest-derived neurons and glia were small and infrequent. Our findings suggest that the neuronal fate of a relatively fixed subpopulation of sacral neural crest cells may be predetermined as these cells neither require the presence of vagal-derived enteric precursors in order to colonise the hindgut, nor are capable of dramatically altering their proliferation or d  相似文献   

17.
Our goal was to determine whether esophageal progenitor cells could be isolated from adult mouse esophagus or bone marrow and shown to home to and proliferate in the irradiated esophagus of recipient mice. Esophageal progenitor cells were isolated from adult male C3H/HeNsd or C57BL/6J green fluorescent protein (GFP(+)) mice by a serial in vitro preplate technique or the technique of side population cell sorting. When injected intravenously (i.v.), these cells homed to the 30-Gy-irradiated esophagus of GFP(-) female recipient mice and formed donor-origin esophageal foci. GFP(+) whole murine bone marrow cells injected i.v. also formed donor-origin esophageal squamous cell foci and protected recipient GFP(-) mice from upper-body irradiation in a cell dose-dependent manner. Marrow chimeric GFP(-) mice reconstituted with GFP(+) cells showed migration of GFP(+) marrow cells to the esophagus after 30 Gy irradiation. Purified esophageal progenitor cells isolated from first-generation preplate cell recipients engrafted after i.v. injection to the esophagus of second-generation-irradiated recipient mice. These data establish that esophageal progenitor cells can home to the irradiated esophagus and show limited differentiation capacity to squamous epithelium.  相似文献   

18.
The neural crest is a highly migratory cell population, unique to vertebrates, that forms much of the craniofacial skeleton and peripheral nervous system. In exploring the cell biological basis underlying this behavior, we have identified an unconventional myosin, myosin-X (Myo10) that is required for neural crest migration. Myo10 is highly expressed in both premigratory and migrating cranial neural crest (CNC) cells in Xenopus embryos. Disrupting Myo10 expression using antisense morpholino oligonucleotides leads to impaired neural crest migration and subsequent cartilage formation, but only a slight delay in induction. In vivo grafting experiments reveal that Myo10-depleted CNC cells migrate a shorter distance and fail to segregate into distinct migratory streams. Finally, in vitro cultures and cell dissociation-reaggregation assays suggest that Myo10 may be critical for cell protrusion and cell-cell adhesion. These results demonstrate an essential role for Myo10 in normal cranial neural crest migration and suggest a link to cell-cell interactions and formation of processes.  相似文献   

19.
In a genetic screen, we isolated a mutation that perturbed motor axon outgrowth, neurogenesis, and somitogenesis. Complementation tests revealed that this mutation is an allele of deadly seven (des). By creating genetic mosaics, we demonstrate that the motor axon defect is non-cell autonomous. In addition, we show that the pattern of migration for some neural crest cell populations is aberrant and crest-derived dorsal root ganglion neurons are misplaced. Furthermore, our analysis reveals that des mutant embryos exhibit a neurogenic phenotype. We find an increase in the number of primary motoneurons and in the number of three hindbrain reticulospinal neurons: Mauthner cells, RoL2 cells, and MiD3cm cells. We also find that the number of Rohon-Beard sensory neurons is decreased whereas neural crest-derived dorsal root ganglion neurons are increased in number supporting a previous hypothesis that Rohon-Beard neurons and neural crest form an equivalence group during development. Mutations in genes involved in Notch-Delta signaling result in defects in somitogenesis and neurogenesis. We found that overexpressing an activated form of Notch decreased the number of Mauthner cells in des mutants indicating that des functions via the Notch-Delta signaling pathway to control the production of specific cell types within the central and peripheral nervous systems.  相似文献   

20.
Neural crest contributions to the lamprey head   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The neural crest is a vertebrate-specific cell population that contributes to the facial skeleton and other derivatives. We have performed focal DiI injection into the cranial neural tube of the developing lamprey in order to follow the migratory pathways of discrete groups of cells from origin to destination and to compare neural crest migratory pathways in a basal vertebrate to those of gnathostomes. The results show that the general pathways of cranial neural crest migration are conserved throughout the vertebrates, with cells migrating in streams analogous to the mandibular and hyoid streams. Caudal branchial neural crest cells migrate ventrally as a sheet of cells from the hindbrain and super-pharyngeal region of the neural tube and form a cylinder surrounding a core of mesoderm in each pharyngeal arch, similar to that seen in zebrafish and axolotl. In addition to these similarities, we also uncovered important differences. Migration into the presumptive caudal branchial arches of the lamprey involves both rostral and caudal movements of neural crest cells that have not been described in gnathostomes, suggesting that barriers that constrain rostrocaudal movement of cranial neural crest cells may have arisen after the agnathan/gnathostome split. Accordingly, neural crest cells from a single axial level contributed to multiple arches and there was extensive mixing between populations. There was no apparent filling of neural crest derivatives in a ventral-to-dorsal order, as has been observed in higher vertebrates, nor did we find evidence of a neural crest contribution to cranial sensory ganglia. These results suggest that migratory constraints and additional neural crest derivatives arose later in gnathostome evolution.  相似文献   

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