A POSITIVE CORRELATION BETWEEN PERMISSIVENESS OF MESODERM TO NEURAL CREST MIGRATION AND EARLY DRG GROWTH

被引:10
|
作者
GVIRTZMAN, G [1 ]
GOLDSTEIN, RS [1 ]
KALCHEIM, C [1 ]
机构
[1] HEBREW UNIV JERUSALEM, HADASSAH MED SCH, DEPT ANAT & EMBRYOL, IL-91010 JERUSALEM, ISRAEL
来源
JOURNAL OF NEUROBIOLOGY | 1992年 / 23卷 / 03期
关键词
AVIAN EMBRYO; LATERAL PLATE MESODERM; MITOGENESIS; NEURAL CREST; SCLEROTOME; SEGMENTATION; SOMITES; SYMPATHETIC GANGLIA; VENTRAL ROOTS;
D O I
10.1002/neu.480230302
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The microenvironment created by grafting rostral somitic halves in place of normal somites leads to the formation of nonsegmented peripheral ganglia (Kalcheim and Teillet, 1989; Goldstein and Kalcheim, 1991) and is mitogenic for neural crest (NC) cells that become dorsal root ganglia (DRG) (Goldstein et al., 1990). We have now extended these studies by using three surgical manipulations to determine how additional mesodermal tissues affected DRG growth in chick embryos. The following experimental manipulations were performed: (1) unilateral deletion of epithelial somites, similar deletions followed by replacing the somites with (2) a three-dimensional collagen matrix, or (3) fragments of quail lateral plate mesoderm. When somites were absent or replaced by collagen matrix, ganglia were unsegmented, and their volumes were decreased by 21% and 12%, respectively, compared to contralateral intact DRG. In contrast, when lateral plate mesoderm was transplanted in place of somitic mesoderm, NC cells migrated into the grafted mesoderm and formed unsegmented DRG whose volumes were increased by 62.6% compared to the contralateral ganglia. These results suggest that although DRG precursors do not require sclerotome to begin migration and condensation processes, DRG size is modulated by the properties of the mesoderm. Permissiveness to migration is positively correlated with an increase in DRG volume. This volume increase observed in grafts of lateral plate mesoderm is likely to result from enhanced proliferation of neural crest progenitors, previously demonstrated for DRG cells in rostral somitic grafts.
引用
收藏
页码:205 / 216
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Loss of early mesoderm leads to loss of neural crest
    Shi, Jianli
    Severson, Courtney
    Klymkowsky, Michael W.
    DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2010, 344 (01) : 459 - 459
  • [2] Relations and interactions between cranial mesoderm and neural crest populations
    Noden, DM
    Trainor, PA
    JOURNAL OF ANATOMY, 2005, 207 (05) : 575 - 601
  • [3] Early development of the cranial neural crest, neural tube and paraxial mesoderm in marsupials.
    Smith, KK
    Vaglia, J
    AMERICAN ZOOLOGIST, 2001, 41 (06): : 1589 - 1589
  • [4] Early migration of the mouse sacral neural crest
    Dong, M.
    Yip, F. P.
    Burns, A. J.
    Chan, W. Y.
    NEUROSIGNALS, 2006, 15 (03) : 122 - 122
  • [5] Spatial relations between avian craniofacial neural crest and paraxial mesoderm cells
    Evans, Darrell J. R.
    Noden, Drew M.
    DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, 2006, 235 (05) : 1310 - 1325
  • [6] THE INFLUENCE OF THE METAMERIC PATTERN IN THE MESODERM ON MIGRATION OF CRANIAL NEURAL CREST CELLS IN THE CHICK-EMBRYO
    ANDERSON, CB
    MEIER, S
    DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 1981, 85 (02) : 385 - 402
  • [7] The relationship between specification and migration of neural crest progenitors
    Nitzan, Erez
    Kalcheim, Chaya
    MECHANISMS OF DEVELOPMENT, 2009, 126 : S88 - S88
  • [8] Relationship between Neural Crest Cells and Cranial Mesoderm during Head Muscle Development
    Grenier, Julien
    Teillet, Marie-Aimee
    Grifone, Raphaelle
    Kelly, Robert G.
    Duprez, Delphine
    PLOS ONE, 2009, 4 (02):
  • [9] The early migration of sacral neural crest cells in the mouse embryo
    Chan, A. K.
    Burn, A. J.
    Chan, W. Y.
    NEUROSIGNALS, 2006, 15 (03) : 151 - 152
  • [10] Mechanisms of early neural crest development: From cell specification to migration
    Kalcheim, C
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF CYTOLOGY - A SURVEY OF CELL BIOLOGY, VOL 200, 2000, 200 : 143 - 196