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Evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures

The vertebrate head–trunk interface (occipital region) has been heavily remodelled during evolution, and its development is still poorly understood. In extant jawed vertebrates, this region provides muscle precursors for the throat and tongue (hypopharyngeal/hypobranchial/hypoglossal muscle precurso...

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Autores principales: Lours-Calet, Corinne, Alvares, Lucia E., El-Hanfy, Amira S., Gandesha, Saniel, Walters, Esther H., Sobreira, Débora Rodrigues, Wotton, Karl R., Jorge, Erika C., Lawson, Jennifer A., Kelsey Lewis, A., Tada, Masazumi, Sharpe, Colin, Kardon, Gabrielle, Dietrich, Susanne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4010675/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24662046
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2014.03.003
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author Lours-Calet, Corinne
Alvares, Lucia E.
El-Hanfy, Amira S.
Gandesha, Saniel
Walters, Esther H.
Sobreira, Débora Rodrigues
Wotton, Karl R.
Jorge, Erika C.
Lawson, Jennifer A.
Kelsey Lewis, A.
Tada, Masazumi
Sharpe, Colin
Kardon, Gabrielle
Dietrich, Susanne
author_facet Lours-Calet, Corinne
Alvares, Lucia E.
El-Hanfy, Amira S.
Gandesha, Saniel
Walters, Esther H.
Sobreira, Débora Rodrigues
Wotton, Karl R.
Jorge, Erika C.
Lawson, Jennifer A.
Kelsey Lewis, A.
Tada, Masazumi
Sharpe, Colin
Kardon, Gabrielle
Dietrich, Susanne
author_sort Lours-Calet, Corinne
collection PubMed
description The vertebrate head–trunk interface (occipital region) has been heavily remodelled during evolution, and its development is still poorly understood. In extant jawed vertebrates, this region provides muscle precursors for the throat and tongue (hypopharyngeal/hypobranchial/hypoglossal muscle precursors, HMP) that take a stereotype path rostrally along the pharynx and are thought to reach their target sites via active migration. Yet, this projection pattern emerged in jawless vertebrates before the evolution of migratory muscle precursors. This suggests that a so far elusive, more basic transport mechanism must have existed and may still be traceable today. Here we show for the first time that all occipital tissues participate in well-conserved cell movements. These cell movements are spearheaded by the occipital lateral mesoderm and ectoderm that split into two streams. The rostrally directed stream projects along the floor of the pharynx and reaches as far rostrally as the floor of the mandibular arch and outflow tract of the heart. Notably, this stream leads and engulfs the later emerging HMP, neural crest cells and hypoglossal nerve. When we (i) attempted to redirect hypobranchial/hypoglossal muscle precursors towards various attractants, (ii) placed non-migratory muscle precursors into the occipital environment or (iii) molecularly or (iv) genetically rendered muscle precursors non-migratory, they still followed the trajectory set by the occipital lateral mesoderm and ectoderm. Thus, we have discovered evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements, driven by the occipital lateral mesoderm and ectoderm, that ensure cell transport and organ assembly at the head–trunk interface.
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spelling pubmed-40106752014-06-15 Evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures Lours-Calet, Corinne Alvares, Lucia E. El-Hanfy, Amira S. Gandesha, Saniel Walters, Esther H. Sobreira, Débora Rodrigues Wotton, Karl R. Jorge, Erika C. Lawson, Jennifer A. Kelsey Lewis, A. Tada, Masazumi Sharpe, Colin Kardon, Gabrielle Dietrich, Susanne Dev Biol Article The vertebrate head–trunk interface (occipital region) has been heavily remodelled during evolution, and its development is still poorly understood. In extant jawed vertebrates, this region provides muscle precursors for the throat and tongue (hypopharyngeal/hypobranchial/hypoglossal muscle precursors, HMP) that take a stereotype path rostrally along the pharynx and are thought to reach their target sites via active migration. Yet, this projection pattern emerged in jawless vertebrates before the evolution of migratory muscle precursors. This suggests that a so far elusive, more basic transport mechanism must have existed and may still be traceable today. Here we show for the first time that all occipital tissues participate in well-conserved cell movements. These cell movements are spearheaded by the occipital lateral mesoderm and ectoderm that split into two streams. The rostrally directed stream projects along the floor of the pharynx and reaches as far rostrally as the floor of the mandibular arch and outflow tract of the heart. Notably, this stream leads and engulfs the later emerging HMP, neural crest cells and hypoglossal nerve. When we (i) attempted to redirect hypobranchial/hypoglossal muscle precursors towards various attractants, (ii) placed non-migratory muscle precursors into the occipital environment or (iii) molecularly or (iv) genetically rendered muscle precursors non-migratory, they still followed the trajectory set by the occipital lateral mesoderm and ectoderm. Thus, we have discovered evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements, driven by the occipital lateral mesoderm and ectoderm, that ensure cell transport and organ assembly at the head–trunk interface. Elsevier 2014-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4010675/ /pubmed/24662046 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2014.03.003 Text en © 2014 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lours-Calet, Corinne
Alvares, Lucia E.
El-Hanfy, Amira S.
Gandesha, Saniel
Walters, Esther H.
Sobreira, Débora Rodrigues
Wotton, Karl R.
Jorge, Erika C.
Lawson, Jennifer A.
Kelsey Lewis, A.
Tada, Masazumi
Sharpe, Colin
Kardon, Gabrielle
Dietrich, Susanne
Evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures
title Evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures
title_full Evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures
title_fullStr Evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures
title_short Evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures
title_sort evolutionarily conserved morphogenetic movements at the vertebrate head–trunk interface coordinate the transport and assembly of hypopharyngeal structures
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4010675/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24662046
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2014.03.003
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