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First published online 30 October 2008
doi: 10.1242/dev.023309
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University of California at San Francisco, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, 533 Parnassus Avenue, U-453, San Francisco, CA 94143-0514, USA.
Author for correspondence (e-mail:
rich.schneider{at}ucsf.edu)
Accepted 6 October 2008
| SUMMARY |
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Key words: Neural crest mesenchyme, Mandibular chondrogenesis, Meckel's cartilage, Sox9, Col2a1, FGF signaling, Quail-duck chimeras, Evolutionary developmental biology
| INTRODUCTION |
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We hope that our attempts to construct a quantitative theory will stimulate others to delve more deeply below the level of pure phenomenology and come to grips with the central issue underlying evolutionary diversification of size and shape - that is, the morphogenetic unfolding of genetic programs in ontogeny and their alteration in the course of phyletic evolution (Alberch et al., 1979, p. 297).
The generation of size and shape has long been a central topic of
developmental and evolutionary biology. In their earliest incarnations, size
and shape studies focused primarily on proportional scaling or `allometry' of
anatomical structures observed during growth or across species
(Thompson, 1917
;
Huxley, 1932
). Such research
ultimately begot the field of morphometrics, which has typically used
multivariate methods and computer-based algorithms to quantify and visualize
differences in size and shape (Bookstein,
1978
; Benson et al.,
1982
; Siegel and Benson,
1982
; Bookstein,
1990
). Although the ability to measure size and shape has become
entirely refined over time, results are often phenomenological, and so many
morphometricians have contextualized their data with quantitative genetics or
evolutionary developmental theories such as heterochrony, as a means to
explain changes in size and shape during ontogeny and phylogeny
(Gould, 1966
;
Alberch et al., 1979
;
Lande, 1979
;
Atchley, 1981
;
McKinney, 1988
;
Atchley and Hall, 1991
). These
approaches have been informative, but much remains to be understood regarding
specific morphogenetic mechanisms that regulate size and shape. Essential
information has begun to emerge from the application of relatively recent
techniques in developmental biology, and especially through manipulations that
test directly the extent to which molecular and cellular events underlie the
spatiotemporal patterning of individual anatomical elements.
For many reasons, including its incomparable paleontological history, its
fairly simple geometry, its evolutionary variability and its high degree of
visibility during embryogenesis, the vertebrate skeleton has featured
prominently in the study of size and shape. In particular, pattern formation
in the vertebrate skull has long been the subject of intense investigation
(de Beer, 1937
;
Hanken and Hall, 1993
), mainly
in relation to genetic specification of skeletal element identity
(Balling et al., 1989
;
Lufkin et al., 1992
;
Gendron-Maguire et al., 1993
;
Rijli et al., 1993
;
Qiu et al., 1997
;
Schilling, 1997
;
Hunt et al., 1998
;
Smith and Schneider, 1998
;
Grammatopoulos et al., 2000
;
Pasqualetti et al., 2000
;
Creuzet et al., 2002
;
Depew et al., 2002
;
Kimmel et al., 2005
), tissue
interactions that mediate mesenchymal differentiation into cartilage and bone
(Schowing, 1968
;
Tyler, 1978
;
Bee and Thorogood, 1980
;
Hall, 1980
;
Hall, 1982
;
Tyler, 1983
;
Thorogood et al., 1986
;
Hall, 1987
;
Thorogood, 1987
;
Richman and Tickle, 1989
;
Richman and Tickle, 1992
;
Dunlop and Hall, 1995
;
Ferguson et al., 2000
;
Shigetani et al., 2000
;
Couly et al., 2002
;
Francis-West et al., 2003
),
regulation of skeletal growth and polarity by secreted molecules
(Barlow and Francis-West,
1997
; Francis-West et al.,
1998
; Schneider et al.,
2001
; Hu et al.,
2003
; Abzhanov et al.,
2004
; Abzhanov and Tabin,
2004
; Crump et al.,
2004
; Wilson and Tucker,
2004
; Wu et al.,
2004
; Liu et al.,
2005
; Marcucio et al.,
2005
; Wu et al.,
2006
), and control of species-specific skeletal morphology by
mesenchyme (Andres, 1949
;
Wagner, 1959
;
Noden, 1983
;
Schneider and Helms, 2003
;
Tucker and Lumsden, 2004
;
Mitsiadis et al., 2006
). The
role of mesenchyme in conveying species-specific pattern has been recognized
principally through inter-specific grafting experiments
(Noden and Schneider, 2006
;
Lwigale and Schneider, 2008
).
For example, neural crest-derived mesenchyme destined to form bones and
cartilages in the face and jaws, was transplanted between quail and duck
(Schneider and Helms, 2003
;
Tucker and Lumsden, 2004
).
Chimeric `quck' embryos, which are duck hosts with quail donor cells, formed
quail-like beaks and jaw joints, whereas chimeric `duail' displayed
duck-derived morphology in quail hosts. The precise molecular mechanisms
through which mesenchyme accomplishes this complex task remain opaque, but the
ability of mesenchyme to regulate its own gene expression and differentiation,
as well as that of adjacent tissues such as epithelia, is apparent
(Schneider and Helms, 2003
;
Eames and Schneider, 2005
;
Schneider, 2005
;
Merrill et al., 2008
).
To identify developmental mechanisms that generate skeletal size and shape,
we employed the quail-duck chimeric transplantation system, which exploits the
divergent maturation rates and distinct species-specific anatomies of these
birds (Fig. 1). We examined the
closely associated processes underlying cartilage formation, histogenesis and
morphogenesis. Histogenesis dictates tissue characteristics (e.g. biochemical
qualities) and involves the differentiation of mesenchyme during two easily
observable stages. First, pre-chondrogenic cells distinguish themselves by
undergoing condensation, and second, they enter overt chondrification, when
they secrete abundant extracellular matrix
(Eames et al., 2003
;
Hall, 2005
). Whereas
histogenesis concerns cartilage differentiation, morphogenesis encompasses the
establishment of relative position, orientation, size and shape of cartilage
elements. Although the process of cartilage histogenesis appears generally
conserved across vertebrates (Eames et
al., 2007
), cartilage morphogenesis has achieved remarkable
evolutionary diversification. We analyzed histogenesis and morphogenesis of
Meckel's cartilage in the lower jaws of quail, duck and quck chimeras, and
focused on the acquisition of size and shape. Meckel's cartilage of the quail
is much smaller than that of a stage-matched duck and becomes distinctly
shaped over time. Moreover, quail embryos develop at a significantly quicker
rate than do duck embryos. Such spatiotemporal differences allow chimeric quck
embryos to uncover mesenchyme-dependent aspects of histogenesis and
morphogenesis. Our results demonstrate that mesenchyme determines both
stage-specific and species-specific size and shape, and does so by exerting
spatiotemporal control over the molecular and histogenic programs for
cartilage. These findings shed light on cellular mechanisms and signaling
interactions regulating skeletal pattern, the functioning of developmental
modules underlying chondrogenesis, and the role of heterochrony during the
evolution of species-specific size and shape.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
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Histology and immunohistochemistry
Control and chimeric embryos were fixed in Serra's (100% ethanol:37%
formaldehyde:glacial acetic acid, 6:3:1) overnight at 4°C. Embryos were
paraffin embedded and cut into 7 µm sections. Some sections were stained
following the Hall Brunt quadruple (HBQ) method
(Hall, 1986
) for histological
visualization of cartilage. To detect donor cells in chimeric embryos,
adjacent sections were immunostained with the quail nuclei-specific Q¢PN
antibody [1:10, Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank (DSHB)]
(Schneider, 1999
).
Immunostaining for collagen type 2 (1:25; DSHB antibody II-II6B3) was carried
out similarly, except sections underwent microwave-induced epitope retrieval
in 0.01 M citrate buffer, and enzymatic digestion with Ficin (Zymed: South San
Francisco, CA). Sections were imaged using brightfield or differential
interference contrast.
Whole embryos were stained with Alcian Blue and Alizarin Red
(Wassersug, 1976
). For early
stages, embryos were stained overnight in 0.1% Alcian Blue (in 70% ethanol,
30% glacial acetic acid), rehydrated, washed with 0.5% potassium hydroxide and
cleared with glycerol.
Gene expression analyses
In situ hybridization was performed
(Albrecht et al., 1997
).
Sections adjacent to those used for histological and immunohistochemical
analyses were hybridized with 35S-labeled chick riboprobes to
sox9 (transcription factor), col2a1 (fibrillar collagen),
fgf4 and fgf8 (secreted ligands), and fgfr2
(receptor). These chick probes specifically and equivalently identified
counterparts in quail and duck tissue (data not shown). Sections were
counterstained with Hoechst dye (Sigma). Hybridization signals were detected
using darkfield and the nuclear stain with epifluorescence.
Morphometric analyses
To quantify changes in size and shape of Meckel's cartilage that occurred
after unilateral transplantation of neural crest, a landmark-based
two-dimensional morphometric analysis was performed
(Coppinger and Schneider,
1995
; Schneider and Helms,
2003
). Whole-mount preparations of control and chimeric mandibles
were imaged at the same magnification. Specimens were aligned in a consistent
orientation. The X and Y axes were set at zero along the planes passing
through the distal tip. Fifteen landmarks were selected along the perimeter of
Meckel's cartilage based on anatomical boundaries, extrema and midpoints
(Zelditch, 2004
). Landmarks
were: (1) distal tip of Meckel's; (2) medial maximum distal width; (3) lateral
maximum distal width; (4) proximal tip of articular; (5) medial maximum
proximal width of articular tip; (6) lateral maximum proximal width of
articular tip; (7) medial maximum width of articular; (8) lateral junction
between Meckel's and articular; (9) medial junction between Meckel's and
articular; (10) medial midpoint between distal and proximal tips; (11) lateral
midpoint between distal and proximal tips; (12) medial midpoint between
midpoint and distal tip; (13) lateral midpoint between midpoint and distal
tip; (14) medial midpoint between midpoint and junction between Meckel's and
articular; (15) lateral midpoint between midpoint and junction between
Meckel's and articular.
Coordinate data for each landmark were obtained using the information tool
in Photoshop and inputted into the Paleontological Statistics Software Package
for Education and Data Analysis (PAST)
(Hammer and Harper, 2006
).
Specimens were averaged within groups and analyzed using a Procrustes
algorithm, which processes sets of X, Y coordinates, removes the factor of
size and reveals shape changes (Chapman,
1990
). The average of the squared magnitudes of the vectors
produced distance coefficients that were used in cluster analyses (Ward's
method).
FGF signaling inhibition in mandibular explants
To test the ability of FGF signaling to regulate the timing of
chondrogenesis, quail mandibular primordia were dissected at HH24, placed on
Transwell membranes (0.4 µm pore size, Corning), and immersed in minimal
BGJb medium (Merrill et al.,
2008
). The FGF receptor inhibitor SU5402 (Calbiochem) (25 µM)
was dissolved in DMSO and added to the media either at the time of culture or
24 hours later. Controls were treated with DMSO alone. Dose was based on a
previous study (Mandler and Neubuser,
2004
). Mandibles were cultured for up to 3 days and processed for
histology and immunohistochemistry.
|
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Analysis of Meckel's cartilage in control embryos revealed that quail and duck exhibit stage-specific and species-specific differences in size and shape. During early embryonic stages (HH28-32), Meckel's cartilage of quail and duck transitioned from a slightly curved morphology to an S-shaped lateral bend morphology (Fig. 2A,B,D-G). By HH35, Meckel's cartilage in quail acquired a relatively straight morphology (Fig. 2I,J) whereas duck maintained more curvature. Meckel's cartilage in quail and duck grew in each successive stage from HH28-41, but duck cartilage elements were consistently larger (e.g. compare Fig. 2F with 2G), reflective of their final adult morphology (Fig. 1A). In HH28 quck chimeras, Meckel's cartilage on the quail donor-derived side appeared longer than Meckel's cartilage on the contralateral duck host side, and was similar to that of HH31 control quail (n=6; Fig. 2C). This is consistent with the observation that HH31 quail Meckel's cartilage is slightly longer than HH28 duck Meckel's cartilage (compare Fig. 2D with 2B). In HH32 quck mandibles, the duck host-derived Meckel's cartilage was the same size and shape as in duck controls, but the quail-derived Meckel's cartilage exhibited a more straightened morphology like that observed in quail controls at HH35 (Fig. 2H,I). At HH38, the quail-derived Meckel's cartilage in quck mandibles was morphologically distinct from the contralateral element of duck origin, and approximated the size and shape of HH41 quail control Meckel's cartilage (n=4; Fig. 2M). Thus, quail donor mesenchyme maintained its faster rate of development within the relatively slower duck host environment, and Meckel's cartilage on the donor side was consistently more advanced in terms of size and shape than that observed on the contralateral host side.
To control for the possibility that the observed size and shape changes to Meckel's cartilage were due to local mechanical forces such as tension at the chimeric midline from asymmetric muscle attachments, we also performed bilateral transplants. In all of the resultant bilateral chimeric quck, Meckel's cartilage was transformed on both sides in a manner equivalent to that observed only on one side in unilateral chimeric quck (n=7; data not shown). Thus, the morphological transformations are due entirely to quail donor-mediated programs for cartilage size and shape.
|
Mesenchyme controls the initiation of overt chondrification
To identify a mechanism through which neural crest mesenchyme carries out
its morphogenetic program for size and shape, we focused on the process of
histogenesis. We investigated the extent to which histogenic programs of
chondrogenesis were altered in chimeric mandibles. We collected quck at stages
that could potentially reveal spatiotemporal shifts in overt chondrification,
which is when chondroblasts begin to secrete cartilaginous matrix
(Hall, 2005
). We assayed for
changes in overt chondrification of Meckel's cartilage and the adjacent
quadrate cartilage. As visualized by Alcian Blue staining of whole-mount
control duck and quail embryos, the quadrate and Meckel's cartilage were not
detected at HH25, but became conspicuous by HH28
(Fig. 4A,D; see also
Fig. 5D). A light and diffuse
Alcian Blue stain was observed in sections through the proximolateral aspect
of mandibles in HH25 duck and quail embryos
(Fig. 4E; see also
Fig. 5H). No
Col2-immunoreactivity was apparent in chondrifying regions of control HH25
duck and quail mandibles (Fig.
4I). Expression patterns for transcripts of col2a1 were
in similar domains as the light Alcian Blue staining of HH25 duck and quail
control mandibles (Fig. 4M; see
also Fig. 5L,P). However, there
were no distinct tissue boundaries, such as a perichondrium, separating
col2a1-positive cells from surrounding mesenchyme.
|
Q¢PN antibody staining on sections through proximolateral regions of HH25 chimeric quck mandibles confirmed an abundance of quail donor-derived mesenchyme on the transplanted sides (Fig. 4B,C). In HH25 quck mandibles, developing cartilages from quail donor mesenchyme exhibited strong Alcian Blue staining, as well as a distinct perichondrial boundary, which was unlike that observed in contralateral duck host mesenchyme (Fig. 4F,G). Additionally, only the donor side exhibited Col2 immunoreactivity (Fig. 4J,K) and the domains and expression levels of col2a1 in quail donor-derived mesenchyme of HH25 quck mandibles appeared more similar to control quail tissues at HH28 than to the more diffuse domains observed in contralateral HH25 duck host mesenchyme (Fig. 4N-P). Therefore, quck chimeras revealed that neural crest-derived mesenchyme autonomously expresses histological and molecular markers of overt chondrification.
Mesenchyme controls the initiation of chondrogenic condensation
To examine the extent to which neural crest mesenchyme regulates the
earliest stages of chondrogenesis, we analyzed molecular markers expressed
during the formation of chondrogenic condensations. As visualized
histologically in HH22 control duck and quail mandibles, a very light and
diffuse Alcian Blue stain was observed in mesenchymal cells located deep to
the surface ectoderm and abutting the endodermal pouch of the pharynx
(Fig. 5E). In the same region
of control duck and quail embryos at HH25, larger condensations of cells
became more conspicuous histologically, although no distinct perichondrium was
observed (Fig. 5H; see also
Fig. 4H). Although there were
low levels of sox9 transcripts in mandibular mesenchyme of control
duck and quail at HH22 (Fig.
4I), the spatial domain of sox9 expression underwent a
restriction by HH25 that reflected histological observations of a chondrogenic
condensation (Fig. 4L;
Fig. 3E). Moreover, a clear
spatial separation was apparent between sox9-expressing cells and the
endodermal pouch at HH25, whereas no such separation was observed at HH22
(Fig. 5I,L). Furthermore, in
both control duck and quail mandibles at HH22, no transcripts for
col2a1 were detected but they appeared in chondrogenic condensations
by HH25 (Fig. 5M,P; see also
Fig. 4M). Finally, to assay for
changes in signaling by growth factors known to be associated with cartilage
formation, we analyzed expression of fgf4, fgf8 and the receptor
fgfr2. We observed epithelial expression of fgf4 and
fgf8 in quail and duck embryos at HH22 and HH25
(Fig. 5Q,T; and data not
shown), which is consistent with published reports that several fgf
genes are expressed in mandibular epithelium as early as HH15 and thereafter
(Wall and Hogan, 1995
;
Shigetani et al., 2000
;
Mina et al., 2002
;
Havens et al., 2006
). Although
we did not detect transcripts for fgfr2 in the mandible at HH22, we
did in the mesenchyme at HH25 (compare Fig.
5U to
5X).
Q¢PN antibody staining of HH22 chimeric mandibles confirmed an abundance of quail donor neural crest-derived mesenchyme on transplanted sides, compared with the contralateral duck host side (Fig. 5B,C). The quail donor side of HH22 quck mandibles exhibited a more robust condensation of cells, which also expressed sox9, when compared with the contralateral duck host side (Fig. 5F,G,J,K). The distinct spatial separation of the sox9-expressing cells from the endodermal pouch on the quail donor side was more similar to that observed in HH25 control quail embryos than that seen in the contralateral duck host side, or in control duck embryos at HH22. In addition, quail neural crest-derived mesenchyme of HH22 quck mandibles expressed col2a1 and fgfr2 in chondrogenic condensations, whereas no transcripts could be detected in contralateral duck mandibular mesenchyme (Fig. 5N,O,V,W).
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To understand developmental mechanisms through which mesenchyme controls
cartilage size and shape, we identified changes in the program of cartilage
histogenesis that preceded changes in morphogenesis. Chondroblasts on the
quail donor side of quck mandibles differentiated on the timeframe of quail
controls as opposed to that of the contralateral duck host. Donor-dependent
shifts in cartilage histogenesis were apparent from the beginning of
mesenchymal condensation. Both sox9, which is the earliest known
molecular marker of chondrogenic condensations
(Healy et al., 1996
;
Zhao et al., 1997
;
Eames et al., 2003
;
Eames et al., 2004
), and
col2a1, which is directly regulated by sox9
(Bell et al., 1997
), were
expressed prematurely by quail donor cells relative to duck host mesenchyme of
the contralateral side. Moreover, we found that FGF signaling, which functions
upstream of sox9 and chondrogenesis
(Healy et al., 1999
;
de Crombrugghe et al., 2000
;
Murakami et al., 2000
;
Petiot et al., 2002
;
Eames et al., 2004
;
Govindarajan and Overbeek,
2006
; Bobick et al.,
2007
) is also regulated by mandibular mesenchyme. To test the
mechanistic significance of these results, we inhibited FGF receptor
activation and discovered that, during a discrete temporal window, FGF
signaling plays a role in setting the timing of mandibular chondrogenesis.
Thus, by regulating the timing of FGF signaling as well as the expression of
sox9 and col2a1, mandibular mesenchyme likely transmits
information for stage-specific and species-specific size and shape to Meckel's
cartilage.
|
|
Mesenchyme integrates programs of cartilage histogenesis and morphogenesis
Despite being conceptually distinct, histogenesis and morphogenesis appear
so tightly coupled during mandibular chondrogenesis that they function as a
single developmental module. Such results confirm other studies in zebrafish,
where early morphogenesis of cells in pharyngeal cartilages is coincident with
histogenesis (Kimmel et al.,
1998
), and sox9-/- mutants have defects in
both cartilage morphogenesis and histogenesis
(Yan et al., 2002
).
Runx2-/- mice also illustrate the interplay between
histogenesis and morphogenesis, for the absence of chondrocyte hypertrophy
leads to a loss of cartilage growth
(Yoshida et al., 2002
;
Iwamoto et al., 2003
). In a
similar vein, our quck studies could not dissociate morphogenesis from
histogenesis. Morphogenetic aspects of quck cartilage development, such as
size and shape acquisition, were altered temporally to the same extent as
histogenic features, such as secretion of extracellular matrix. Although the
possibility exists that additional events during histogenesis and
morphogenesis, including the specification of pre-chondrogenic mesenchyme or
spatial initiation of condensations, occur independently of mesenchyme, we
think this is unlikely as all aspects of chondrogenesis that we examined (e.g.
matrix deposition, protein synthesis and gene expression), were altered in our
experimental system.
Thus, our results support the notion that histogenesis and morphogenesis
are highly inter-dependent processes, and that their integration during
chondrogenesis characterizes a developmental module defined primarily by the
autonomy of neural crest-derived mesenchyme
(Fig. 7). This is similar to
the role proposed for mesenchyme in other developmental modules such as the
formation of epidermal appendages (Eames
and Schneider, 2005
;
Schneider, 2005
). The
modularity of chondrogenesis makes sense given that cartilage morphogenesis
relies on histogenesis to generate proper three-dimensional form, and many of
the same molecules and signaling pathways that function during early neural
crest cell specification, proliferation and differentiation, such as BMPs and
FGFs, are also known to affect later cartilage pattern (i.e. size and shape)
in the avian oral cavity (Francis-West et
al., 1994
; Mina et al.,
1995
; Wall and Hogan,
1995
; Barlow and Francis-West,
1997
; Ekanayake and Hall,
1997
; Richman et al.,
1997
; Barlow et al.,
1999
; Tucker et al.,
1999
; Wang et al.,
1999
; Shigetani et al.,
2000
; Ashique et al.,
2002
; Mina et al.,
2002
; Abzhanov et al.,
2004
; Wilson and Tucker,
2004
; Havens et al.,
2006
; Schneider,
2007
). But BMPs and FGFs also appear to function divergently,
especially given their effects on upper versus lower regions of the beak, the
times at which they act and the tissues in which they are expressed. For
example, published work on the ability of BMPs to regulate size and shape
pertain primarily to the upper beak, and, in particular, to the frontonasal
process (Abzhanov and Tabin,
2004
; Wu et al.,
2004
; Wu et al.,
2006
; Foppiano et al.,
2007
). Moreover, our prior experiments show that BMP signaling
acts slightly later during mandibular development to regulate the timing of
bone formation, but not of cartilage
(Merrill et al., 2008
).
|
Our results reveal that quail donor mesenchyme carries information on the
rate and time at which chondrogenesis should proceed. Most likely, this
predisposition arises from intrinsic mechanisms that control the cycling and
proliferation of cells in a quail-specific manner. The consequence is that
chondrogenesis advances by three embryonic stages, which is similar to what we
observed in during feather morphogenesis and osteogenesis
(Eames and Schneider, 2005
;
Merrill et al., 2008
), and
Meckel's cartilage attains species-specific size and shape. Other possible
outcomes could have been that quail donor cells follow the timetable of the
host and make cartilage that is either quail-like or duck-like in morphology;
or they generate some novel anatomy that is either a combination of, or unlike
that normally observed in quail or duck. Instead, we find that quail donor
mesenchyme introduces a significant alteration in the timing and rates of
histogenic events and executes a program of cartilage morphogenesis like that
normally observed in quail. As such, our results suggest that heterochronic
changes can generate species-specific morphology, but they do so with at least
two very conspicuous caveats. First, in terms of absolute time, there really
is no heterochrony as quail donor cells followed their own schedule and
behaved as quail cells normally do. The heterochrony we introduced can only be
considered in terms of relative timing (i.e. to that of the duck host) of
molecular and cellular events during chondrogenesis. However, such sequence
heterochrony may not have occurred if quail cells were able to accelerate all
relevant duck host events immediately after neural crest transplantation.
Second, quail-specific morphology was achieved not merely by an acceleration
of developmental events but also by progressive implementation of a
quail-specific genome. In this capacity, quail donor mesenchyme may simply be
responding to common signals present in duck host epithelium that are
continuously expressed during a broad developmental window (e.g.
fgf4), and which are able to accommodate the difference in stage
between donor-derived and host-derived mesenchyme. Studies that employ species
with wider disparities in growth rates could resolve this possibility by
elucidating the limits of competency in either the donor or host, although our
published data already confirm that epithelium can respond to premature
mesenchymal induction (Schneider and
Helms, 2003
; Eames and
Schneider, 2005
). Overall, the remarkable propensity of neural
crest-derived mesenchyme to impart size and shape across embryonic stages and
between species in parallel, points to the generative role that development
has played during the course of morphological evolution.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
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A.H. Jheon and R.A. Schneider The Cells that Fill the Bill: Neural Crest and the Evolution of Craniofacial Development Journal of Dental Research, January 1, 2009; 88(1): 12 - 21. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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