首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


A Quantitative Cell Migration Assay for Murine Enteric Neural Progenitors
Authors:Karl-Frederik Bergeron  Tatiana Cardinal  Nicolas Pilon
Affiliation:1.Molecular Genetics of Development Laboratory, Biological Sciences, UQAM
Abstract:Neural crest cells (NCC) are a transient and multipotent cell population that originates from the dorsal neural tube and migrates extensively throughout the developing vertebrate embryo. In addition to providing peripheral glia and neurons, NCC generate melanocytes as well as most of the cranio-facial skeleton. NCC migration and differentiation is controlled by a combination of their axial origin along the neural tube and their exposure to regionally distinct extracellular cues. Such contribution of extracellular ligands is especially evident during the formation of the enteric nervous system (ENS), a complex interconnected network of neural ganglia that locally controls (among other things) gut muscle movement and intestinal motility. Most of the ENS is derived from a small initial pool of NCC that undertake a long journey in order to colonize - in a rostral to caudal fashion - the entire length of the prospective gut. Among several signaling pathways known to influence enteric NCC colonization, GDNF/RET signaling is recognized as the most important. Indeed, spatiotemporally controlled secretion of the RET ligand GDNF by the gut mesenchyme is chiefly responsible for the attraction and guidance of RET-expressing enteric NCC to and within the embryonic gut. Here, we describe an ex vivo cell migration assay, making use of a transgenic mouse line possessing fluorescently labeled NCC, which allows precise quantification of enteric NCC migration potential in the presence of various growth factors, including GDNF.
Keywords:Neuroscience   Issue 79   Developmental Biology   Molecular Biology   Neural Crest   Mice   Transgenic   Intestinal Obstruction   Cell Migration Assays   Embryonic Development   life sciences   animal biology   animal models   Cell migration   embryonic explants   collagen gel   Mouse embryo   neural crest cells   growth factors
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号