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The neural crest stem cells: control of neural crest cell fate and plasticity by endothelin-3

Abstracts

How the considerable diversity of neural crest (NC)-derived cell types arises in the vertebrate embryo has long been a key question in developmental biology. The pluripotency and plasticity of differentiation of the NC cell population has been fully documented and it is well-established that environmental cues play an important role in patterning the NC derivatives throughout the body. Over the past decade, in vivo and in vitro cellular approaches have unravelled the differentiation potentialities of single NC cells and led to the discovery of NC stem cells. Although it is clear that the final fate of individual cells is in agreement with their final position within the embryo, it has to be stressed that the NC cells that reach target sites are pluripotent and further restrictions occur only late in development. It is therefore a heterogenous collection of cells that is submitted to local environmental signals in the various NC-derived structures. Several factors were thus identified which favor the development of subsets of NC-derived cells in vitro. Moreover, the strategy of gene targeting in mouse has led at identifying new molecules able to control one or several aspects of NC cell differentiation in vivo. Endothelin peptides (and endothelin receptors) are among those. The conjunction of recent data obtained in mouse and avian embryos and reviewed here contributes to a better understanding of the action of the endothelin signaling pathway in the emergence and stability of NC-derived cell phenotypes.

neural crest; avian embryo; cell differentiation; endothelin3; peripheral nervous system; melanocytes; Schwann cells; mesectoderm


O modo como a diversidade dos tipos celulares derivados da crista neural (CN) surge, no embrião de vertebrado, tem sido uma pergunta chave na biologia do desenvolvimento. A pluripotência e a plasticidade na diferenciação da população de células da CN têm sido intensivamente documentadas, ficando deste modo estabelecido que os factores ambientais têm um papel importante na correta diferenciação dos derivados da CN no organismo. Na década passada, estudos in vivo e in vitro, revelaram as potencialidades de diferenciação de células de CN individuais levando à descoberta de células "stem" (células tronco) da CN. Embora seja claro que a diferenciação celular final das células individuais está de acordo com a sua localização final no embrião, é necessário realçar que as células da CN que atingem locais alvo são pluripotentes e as restrições impostas nas suas potencialidades ocorrem somente numa fase mais tardia do desenvolvimento. A CN é, deste modo, um conjunto heterogêneo de células que é submetida a sinais ambientais localizados nas várias estruturas derivadas da CN. Foram assim identificados vários factores que favorecem a diferenciação de subgrupos de células derivadas da CN, in vitro. Para além destes factores foram também identificadas novas moléculas capazes de controlar um ou vários aspectos da diferenciação celular da CN in vivo, através da estratégia molecular de "gene targeting" em ratinho. As endotelinas (e os seus receptores) são um exemplo destas moléculas. O conjunto dos resultados obtidos recentemente em embriões de ratinho e de galinha e descritos no presente artigo, contribuíram para uma melhor compreensão do modo de ação da via de sinalização das endotelinas no controlo do aparecimento e da estabilidade dos fenotipos celulares derivados da CN.

crista neural; embrião de ave; diferenciação celular; endotelina3; sistema nervoso periférico; melanocitos; células de Schwann; mesectoderme


The neural crest stem cells: control of neural crest cell fate and plasticity by endothelin-3* * Invited paper Correspondence to: Dr. Elisabeth Dupin E-mail: dupin@infobiogen.fr / Fax: 33+1 48734377

ELISABETH DUPIN, CARLA REAL and NICOLE LeDOUARIN

Institut d'Embryologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire (CNRS FRE 2160)

49 bis Avenue de la Belle Gabrielle, 94136 Nogent-sur-Marne, France

Manuscript received on July 19, 2001; accepted for publication on July 26, 2001;

presented by VIVALDO MOURA NETO

ABSTRACT

How the considerable diversity of neural crest (NC)-derived cell types arises in the vertebrate embryo has long been a key question in developmental biology. The pluripotency and plasticity of differentiation of the NC cell population has been fully documented and it is well-established that environmental cues play an important role in patterning the NC derivatives throughout the body. Over the past decade, in vivo and in vitro cellular approaches have unravelled the differentiation potentialities of single NC cells and led to the discovery of NC stem cells. Although it is clear that the final fate of individual cells is in agreement with their final position within the embryo, it has to be stressed that the NC cells that reach target sites are pluripotent and further restrictions occur only late in development. It is therefore a heterogenous collection of cells that is submitted to local environmental signals in the various NC-derived structures. Several factors were thus identified which favor the development of subsets of NC-derived cells in vitro. Moreover, the strategy of gene targeting in mouse has led at identifying new molecules able to control one or several aspects of NC cell differentiation in vivo. Endothelin peptides (and endothelin receptors) are among those. The conjunction of recent data obtained in mouse and avian embryos and reviewed here contributes to a better understanding of the action of the endothelin signaling pathway in the emergence and stability of NC-derived cell phenotypes.

Key words: neural crest, avian embryo, cell differentiation, endothelin3, peripheral nervous system, melanocytes, Schwann cells, mesectoderm.

INTRODUCTION

The neural crest (NC) arises at the junction between the prospective epidermis and the prospective neural plate in vertebrates, regardless of whether the NC cells ultimately detach from the open neural folds (as in mammals and amphibians), the closed neural tube (as in birds), or from an ectodermal thickening at the neural plate-epidermis boundary (as in fish). Shortly afterward the morphologically identical NC cells migrate extensively throughout the embryo and later give rise to a wide array of derivatives in a variety of sites.

NC cells contain different subsets of cells that follow distinct migratory pathways and are at the origin of multiple cells in the adult (for references, Le Douarin 1982, Le Douarin and Kalcheim 1999). The levels of the NC along the neural axis have been designated, from rostral to caudal, as cephalic, vagal, trunk, and lumbosacral. The various derivatives of the NC are listed in Table I. The NC was found to give rise to most of the neurons and all the glial cells of the sensory and autonomic ganglia of the peripheral nervous system (PNS), to the entire enteric nervous system, and to various glandular and endocrine cell types. In addition, the cephalic NC from the level of the diencephalon yields mesenchymal cell types forming the so-called mesectoderm, including the facial and head dermis and connective tissue, the smooth muscles of the wall of arterial trunks and most of the skull vault (i.e., parietal and frontal bones) (Couly et al. 1993). In addition, the NC yields the pigment cells (except those of the pigmented retina). Melanocytes are generated along almost the entire axis of the embryo whereas other NC derivatives such as the chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla and the enteric nerve cells are generated from very restricted regions of the neuroaxis. The NC is therefore regionalized as concerning the different ganglionic neurons (i.e. sensory, autonomic and enteric) belonging to the PNS.

As a population, the NC cells show a great pluripotency when challenged with a new environment by heterotopic grafting (quail-chick neural chimeras). For example, the vagal NC, which normally produces cholinergic gut neurons but no adrenergic cells, produces sympathetic neurons and chromaffin cells when grafted at the trunk level. Similar transpositions of fragments of the neural primordium along the antero-posterior axis have thus revealed that NC regions have broader developmental capacities than actual fates expressed in the embryo. Nevertheless, the trunk NC cells are unable to contribute to mesectodermal structures when grafted at cephalic level, therefore suggesting an early developmental restriction of NC cells caudal to somite 5 as compared to the more rostral cephalic NC.

THE GENERATION OF NEURAL CREST CELLULAR DIVERSITY; THE NEURAL CREST STEM CELL CONCEPT

A key question in understanding the ontogeny of NC derivatives is to elucidate how cellular diversity is generated from the apparently homogeneous population of NC cells. Two different scenarios can be made to explain the diversity of cell phenotypes arising from such a pluripotent population of embryonic cells. One possibility is that the NC consists of a heterogeneous assortment of committed unipotent progenitor cells, each programmed to give rise to a particular derivative. These progenitor cells could migrate in a directed fashion to their proper locations and differentiate according to prescribed fates, or they could migrate randomly and those localized in inappropriate sites must either fail to differentiate or die. A second possibility is that the NC is a homogeneous population of multipotent cells, capable of generating any crest derivative under appropriate conditions. Those multipotent cells might migrate randomly and differentiate according to instructive cues encountered along their migratory pathways or at their final sites.

With the establishment of clonal cultures of NC cells and with the complement in vivo single cell tracing experiments, it was revealed that the reality lies somewhere in between these two extremes.

Using a permissive and constant culture medium, that theoretically permitted the differentiation of all NC-derived cell types, it has been possible to study the potentialities of individual cells in vitro. In the 1970s, Cohen and co-workers were first able to establish cultures of trunk NC cells from the quail neural primordium. NC cells in a colony assay generated clones either entirely pigmented, partially pigmented or entirely without pigment obtained (Cohen and Konigsberg 1975). The production of antibodies to neural antigens later allowed a better characterization of multipotent avian trunk NC cells, by identifying the existence of both catecholaminergic and sensory neurons in multiphenotypic colonies (Sieber-Blum 1989).

In vitro clonal analysis permitted us to address the controversial question of the origin of mesectodermal lineages from the cephalic NC. Two models could be proposed (Figure 1), a first one assuming an early segregation in the premigratory NC of mesectodermal precursors from the progenitors of other NC-derived (neural, melanocytic and endocrine) lineages, and a second model where the NC includes highly multipotent cells capable to generate both mesectoderm and other NC derivatives. By seeding migratory NC cells individually on a feeder layer of growth-inhibited 3T3 fibroblasts and analyzing their progeny with lineage-specific markers, evidence was provided for extremely diverse developmental and proliferative potentialities of NC cells taken from the mes-metencephalic level (Baroffio et al. 1988, 1991, Dupin et al. 1990).


Common progenitors for neurons, adrenergic cells, glia and melanocytes were identified as well as more restricted oligopotent progenitors and committed glial or neuronal precursors. In addition, colonies were obtained that contained both glial and neuronal cells, and cartilage, a main derivative of mesectoderm, a finding which argues against complete segregation of ectomesenchymal and neural progenitors prior to the emigration of NC cells from the neural primordium. Moreover, the progeny of a single cell included samples of all the major phenotypes represented in the mesencephalic NC derivatives (i.e., glial cells, adrenergic and non-adrenergic neurons, melanocytes and cartilage), therefore implying the existence of a NC stem cell able to yield all derivatives, including mesectoderm (Baroffio et al. 1991). Taken together, these results show that the migrating crest is composed of a heterogenous population of progenitor cells endowed with a variety of developmental capacities. One can hypothesize that these cephalic NC precursors are lineally-related (Figure 2), thus supporting the view that, as NC cells divide during migration, progressive restriction takes place in the developmental potentials of the cells generated from an initial pool of multipotent stem cells.


Pluripotency of NC cells was confirmed for mammalian cells by in vitro clonal analysis of mouse (Ito et al. 1993) and rat (Stemple and Anderson 1992) trunk NC cells. Rat NC cells sorted out by labeling with p75 low affinity NGF receptor and grown in clonal cultures give rise to neurons, glial cells and fibroblasts and these multipotent progenitors self-maintain after serial propagation. Those findings indicate, for the first time, the existence in mammals of NC stem cells defined by the property to give rise to multiple phenotypes and to self-renew (Stemple and Anderson 1992).

However, it is possible that crest cells isolated in vitro may behave differently than they do in the living embryo, due to the influence of signals coming from the in vivo environment and from cell-cell interactions. Therefore, an important complement to the in vitro experiments is prospective cell lineage analysis in the intact embryo where an individual cell is labeled in situ so that its descendants can be uniquely identified. By injecting the vital fluorescent dye lysinated fluorescent dextran into individual cells of the chick neural primordium, Bronner-Fraser and Fraser (1988, 1989) have demonstrated the multipotency of NC cells in vivo. The labeled progeny could contain cell types as diverse as sensory neurons, presumptive pigment cells and adrenomedullary cells. However, it was also found that NC cells predetermined to the sensory neuron phenotype populate the dorsal root ganglion, thus confirming earlier evidence for the presence of committed sensory neuronal precursors in the premigratory NC (Ziller et al. 1983).

Taken together, these results show that NC cells are heterogeneous in their developmental potentialities, including multipotent stem cell-like progenitors as well as already committed precursors. Therefore, appropriated signals from the environment are required to promote the differentiation of the proper NC-derived cell types in the various derivatives. Knowing the factors that influence the expression of developmental potentialities of NC cells locally and are responsible for final fate decisions is of great importance for understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying NC multipotency.

GROWTH FACTOR CONTROL OF NEURAL CREST CELL FATES

The evidence for the existence of multipotent progenitors in the NC raised the question of how these progenitors generate distinct phenotypes in the various NC derivatives. On one hand, cell fate could be assigned by lineage or other cell-autonomous mechanisms. On the other hand, cell fate could be influenced or determined by cell-extrinsic signals. Similar to the model proposed for the hematopoietic system, it seems likely that both types of mechanisms operate in NC cell specification. In this model, multipotent stem cells generate progenitors committed to one or more sublineages, which then proliferate, survive and differentiate in response to specific environmental cues. The process of differentiation necessarily involves many changes in gene expression, which are brought about by regulatory transcription factors acting in the cell nucleus. One goal of studying NC differentiation is to understand the relationship between the action of environmental signals at the cell surface and the changes in transcriptional regulation that these signals bring about in target cells.

In general, it is thought that NC cells are directed toward particular fates by signals localized along migratory pathways and at differentiation sites. Many such factors appear to instruct multipotent NC cells to form specific derivatives. Others appear to act selectively, affecting the proliferation or survival of particular NC progenitors.

Several factors have been identified that direct multipotent rat NC progenitors to generate specific cell types. The transforming growth factor (TGF) superfamily is an important group of cytokines that have a role in NC differentiation (Shah et al. 1996). One of the proteins of this group, bone morphogenic protein 2 (BMP2), is involved in the production of sympathetic neurons by trunk NC cells in vivo as well as in vitro. BMP2 is expressed in the dorsal aorta, near which sympathetic ganglia form and it induces the expression by NC cells of MASH1 encoding a basic-helix-loop-helix transcription factor required for autonomic neurogenesis. In addition, it was suggested recently that local concentrations of BMP2 can determine the choice between sympathetic and parasympathetic fates in rodent NC cells (White et al. 2001). In contrast, TGF1 drives rat NC stem cells to a smooth muscle fate. Both TGF1 and BMP2 act instructively to influence cell fate decisions, rather than selectively to support the survival of lineage-committed progenitors (Shah et al. 1996). Neuregulin1/glial growth factor (GGF), a Schwann cell mitogen of neuronal origin, inhibits neurogenic commitment and promotes glial development of multipotent NC cells in culture (Shah et al. 1994). It is unclear how pluripotent NC cells exposed to multiple signals in vivo integrate them to regulate the outcome of a particular phenotype. However, in vitro experiments of simultaneous and sequential addition of different growth factors to rat NC cells have revealed that integration of competing influences is influenced by NC stem cell-intrinsic differences in the relative sensitivity and timing of responses to different factors (Shah and Anderson 1997). BMP2 neurogenic signal overrides GGF action at saturating concentrations of both factors; however, GGF can attenuate MASH1 induction by low doses of BMP2, but is not sufficient for glial lineage commitment. The generation of glia in PNS ganglia, i.e., in a local environment containing strong instructive neurogenic factors (BMP2), is due to expression by the neuroblasts of Notch ligands, which in turn impairs neighboring cells to enter the neuronal pathway. The loss of neurogenic capacity promoted by activation of Notch signaling is acquired rapidly and irreversibly, leading to glial cell differentiation (Morrison et al. 2000, Wakamatsu et al. 2000).

Another factor that plays a role in NC cell differentiation is retinoic acid (RA), a natural derivative of vitamin A. RA is known to induce in vitro the differentiation of many cell lines of NC origin (Amos and Lotan 1990) and to cause NC embryopathies after deprivation or administration in excess during vertebrate embryonic development (Morriss-Kay 1993). In vitro experiments have shown that RA favors the development of neuronal lineages derived from the crest (Henion and Weston 1994, Dupin and Le Douarin 1995, Ito and Morita 1995, Rockwood and Maxwell 1996). In cephalic and trunk quail NC clonal cultures, it influences the differentiation of cells when they are in pluripotent state by specifically increasing the number of adrenergic cells in their progeny. RA also stimulates pigment synthesis in melanoblasts differentiating in vitro (Dupin and Le Douarin 1995).

The mouse genetics proved to be very useful for the knowledge of the factors that influence the migration, survival and differentiation of NC melanocytic precursors. Mouse mutants with alterations in coat color have permitted the study of pigment cell development. Two well-known mouse spotting mutants with clear defects in melanogenesis are white dominant-spotting (w) and Steel (sl). Heterozygote mutants have a patchy coat color, whereas homozygotes are either completely white or die during embryogenesis, although the extent of pigmentation deficit varies with different mutant alleles. The analysis of the responsible genes revealed a molecular relationship between the two mutant strains: the w locus encodes the receptor tyrosine kinase c-kit, whereas the sl locus encodes its cognate ligand, variously known as steel factor (SLF), stem cell factor or mast cell factor (for references, see Reith and Bernstein 1991, Williams et al. 1990, 1992, Galli et al. 1993). A number of in vitro studies of mouse and avian NC suggest that SLF promotes survival and moderate proliferation of melanocytes or their precursors (Murphy et al. 1992, Lahav et al. 1994, Reid et al. 1995). Lahav et al. reported that SLF promotes the appearance of an early marker of melanoblasts/melanocytes in cultured quail NC cells (Lahav et al. 1994).

THE ROLE OF ENDOTHELIN 3 IN NEURAL CREST CELL DIFFERENTIATION

The endothelins are another determinant group of factors responsible for the differentiation of certain NC derivatives. The endothelins 1, 2 and 3 (EDN1, EDN2 and EDN3) are a family of 21 aa peptides that activate, in mammals, one or both of the two heptahelical, G-protein-coupled endothelin receptors type A and B (EDNRA and EDNRB). EDNRA exhibits different affinities for endothelin peptides and EDNRB accepts all three peptides equally. The EDN1/EDNRA signaling pathway thus acts on cranial NC derivatives. Target disruption of EDN1 and EDNRA genes in mouse results in blood pressure elevation and cranio-facial abnormalities. The development of thyroid, tongue and other facial structures is impaired (Kurihara et al. 1994, 1995). Many of these defects are related to abnormal development of NC-derived mesectoderm, which forms most of the connective tissue, cartilage and bones of the head and face. The breakthrough in deciphering the role of EDN3/EDNRB in NC development was the identification of the genetic defects responsible for the Piebald (s) and Lethal spotting (ls) mutations in mouse. These mutations reside in the genes encoding EDNRB (Puffenberger et al. 1994) and its ligand EDN3, respectively (Greenstein-Baynash et al. 1994).

In ls/ls mice, a point mutation in EDN3 impairs the formation of the mature active form of the protein. Moreover, a disruption of the EDN3 gene by homologous recombination leads to an identical ls/ls phenotype of coat color spotting and aganglionic terminal gut (megacolon).

Both EDN3 and its receptor EDNRB are therefore necessary for the development of NC-derived melanocytes and posterior enteric nerve cells. In vitro studies have shown that EDN3 favors the development of melanocyte progenitors in mouse and avian NC cultures (Lahav et al. 1996, Reid et al. 1996) (Figure 3). The time at which melanocyte precursors appear probably corresponds to the stage before crest cells need the action of EDNRB/EDN3 receptor-ligand system. In mouse, requirement for functional EDNRB corresponds to a restricted period in melanoblast early migration, before entry into the epidermis (Shin et al. 1999). In avians, human EDN3 peptide is a potent mitogen for NC cells well before the appearance of melanogenic differentiation (Lahav et al. 1996). These observations therefore suggest that in vivo EDN3 is essential for increasing the early NC cell population to ensure a sufficient supply of melanoblasts needed for colonizing the entire skin. In addition, the analysis of the effects of EDN3 on single quail NC cells in culture indicates that EDN3 promotes the survival and proliferation of uni- and bipotent melanocyte precursors (Lahav et al. 1998).


In the avian embryo, NC cells initially express EDNRB before they leave the neural primordium, all along the neural axis (Nataf et al. 1996). At later stages, EDNRB is expressed along the medio-lateral pathway of NC cell migration in rat embryos (Gariepy et al. 1998). By contrast, EDNRB transcripts are not detected in avian melanocytes and melanoblasts. However, it was found that EDNRB2, a third EDNR identified in birds (Lecoin et al. 1998), is expressed by melanoblasts as soon as they begin to migrate from the migrating staging area near the dorsal neural tube, then when they progress along the medio-lateral pathway and later on during further differentiation of melanocytes. Expression of EDNRB2 in the NC is thus restricted to the cells of the melanocytic lineage which develop in close contact to the epidermal source of the EDN3 ligand (Nataf et al. 1998).

In vitro prolonged exposure to EDN3 causes trunk NC cells to switch from EDNRB to EDNRB2 expression, which eventually results in the positive selection of melanogenic cells (Lahav et al. 1998). In vivo, EDNRB, which is expressed by virtually all premigratory and early migratory avian NC cells, is switched off by crest cells which migrate medio-laterally under the ectoderm and which start to express EDNRB2 (Figure 3). It is therefore likely that, during avian skin development, EDN3 synthesized by the epidermis triggers, via activation of EDNRB2, the survival and proliferation of melanoblasts and eventually melanocytes.

PLASTICITY OF NEURAL CREST-DERIVED PHENOTYPES

Once they have differentiated, functional cells usually maintain their cellular specificity in the multicellular organization of animals. In some pathological conditions, however, such as reparative regeneration, tumorigenesis and carcinogenesis, conversion of cellular specificities can frequently be observed. Lens regeneration observed in the genus Triturus has been considered to be the clearest and most representative example of cell type conversion, as newt lens can be regenerated from the dorsal iris by metaplasia of its pigment cells. The whole neural retina of the newt can also be regenerated from the retinal pigment epithelium. The same results were obtained using the pigment epithelium of chick eyes and, under spreading culture conditions, it was observed the transdifferentiation of chick neural retina into lens and pigment cells (for references, Eguchi and Kodama 1993).

It was demonstrated recently that some of the NC derivatives also show the capacity to dedifferentiate/transdifferentiate in the presence of a growth factor. Clonal cultures of already pigmented melanocytes isolated from the epidermis of quail embryos show high proliferative activity in the presence of EDN3. Such dividing pigment cells progressively loose melanogenic traits and, under prolonged treatment with EDN3, generate a mixed progeny containing not only melanocytes but also cells expressing glial-specific proteins (Dupin et al. 2000). Therefore, epidermal pigment cells in vitro can be reversed to the bipotent stage of glia-melanocytic NC progenitor, which suggests that proliferative signals such as EDN3 may alter the stability of the pigment cell phenotype in vivo.

Similarly, Schwann cells purified from embryonic sciatic nerves and cultured individually respond to EDN3/EDNRB signaling by yielding descendant colonies composed of both glial cells and melanocytes. The onset of melanogenesis by dividing Schwann cells occurs progressively, by sequential induction of EDNRB2, early melanocyte antigens and later on melanin synthesis (Dupin, Real, Glavieux, Vaigot and Le Douarin, in preparation).

Taken together, these results show that the selection and expansion of melanogenic precursors depend on the local action of EDN3 on bipotent glial-melanocytic NC cells derived from NC stem cells (Figure 4). The immature bipotent stage of this common ancestor can be recapitulated in vitro by differentiated pigment and glial cells, thus providing evidence for the plasticity of NC cell fate which is represented here by the reciprocal conversion between pigment and glial phenotypes. This suggests that EDN3, due to its strong proliferative activity on NC precursors and NC-derived cells, could play a role in vivo in several pathologies implicating both glia and melanocytes, such as neurofibromatosis and tumors of mixed origin.


ABBREVIATIONS: EDN3, endothelin 3; EDNRB, endothelin receptor B; NC, neural crest; PNS, peripheral nervous system; SLF, steel factor.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We wish to thank Michèle Scaglia for preparing bibliography. This work was supported by the Centre National pour la Recherche Scientifique and Collège de France and by a grant from the Association pour la Recherche contre le Cancer (No 5578). C.R. is recipient of a doctoral fellowship from Fundação para Ciência e Tecnologia, Portugal (SFRH/BD/990/2000).

RESUMO

O modo como a diversidade dos tipos celulares derivados da crista neural (CN) surge, no embrião de vertebrado, tem sido uma pergunta chave na biologia do desenvolvimento.

A pluripotência e a plasticidade na diferenciação da população de células da CN têm sido intensivamente documentadas, ficando deste modo estabelecido que os factores ambientais têm um papel importante na correta diferenciação dos derivados da CN no organismo. Na década passada, estudos in vivo e in vitro, revelaram as potencialidades de diferenciação de células de CN individuais levando à descoberta de células "stem" (células tronco) da CN. Embora seja claro que a diferenciação celular final das células individuais está de acordo com a sua localização final no embrião, é necessário realçar que as células da CN que atingem locais alvo são pluripotentes e as restrições impostas nas suas potencialidades ocorrem somente numa fase mais tardia do desenvolvimento. A CN é, deste modo, um conjunto heterogêneo de células que é submetida a sinais ambientais localizados nas várias estruturas derivadas da CN. Foram assim identificados vários factores que favorecem a diferenciação de subgrupos de células derivadas da CN, in vitro. Para além destes factores foram também identificadas novas moléculas capazes de controlar um ou vários aspectos da diferenciação celular da CN in vivo, através da estratégia molecular de "gene targeting" em ratinho. As endotelinas (e os seus receptores) são um exemplo destas moléculas. O conjunto dos resultados obtidos recentemente em embriões de ratinho e de galinha e descritos no presente artigo, contribuíram para uma melhor compreensão do modo de ação da via de sinalização das endotelinas no controlo do aparecimento e da estabilidade dos fenotipos celulares derivados da CN.

Palavras-chave: crista neural, embrião de ave, diferenciação celular, endotelina3, sistema nervoso periférico, melanocitos, células de Schwann, mesectoderme.

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  • *
    Invited paper
    Correspondence to: Dr. Elisabeth Dupin
    E-mail:
    dupin@infobiogen.fr / Fax: 33+1 48734377
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      12 Dec 2001
    • Date of issue
      Dec 2001

    History

    • Accepted
      26 July 2001
    • Received
      19 July 2001
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