|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search | ||||
The fully linked HTML version of this article has now been published.
In the vertebrate head, mesoderm cells fuse together to form a myofiber, which is attached to specific cranial neural crest (CNC)-derived skeletal elements in a highly coordinated manner. Although it has long been recognized that CNC plays a role in the formation of the head musculature, the precise molecular underpinnings of this process remain elusive. In the present study we explored the nature of the crosstalk between CNC and mesoderm cells during head muscle development, employing three models for genetic perturbations of CNC development in mice, as well as experimental ablation of CNC in chick embryos. We demonstrate that although early myogenesis is CNC-independent, the migration, patterning and differentiation of muscle precursors are regulated by CNC. In the absence of CNC cells, accumulated myoblasts are kept in a proliferative state, presumably because of an increase of Fgf8 in adjacent tissues, which leads to abnormalities in both differentiation and subsequent myofiber organization in the head. These results have uncovered a surprising degree of complexity and multiple distinct roles for CNC in the patterning and differentiation of muscles during craniofacial development. We suggest that CNC cells control craniofacial development by regulating positional interactions with mesoderm-derived muscle progenitors that together shape the cranial musculoskeletal architecture in vertebrate embryos.
This article has been cited by other articles:
Development ePress online publication date 25 Jul 2007
doi: 10.1242/dev.002501
This Article ![]()
![]()
Full Text (PDF)
![]()
All Versions of this Article:
dev.002501v1
134/17/3065
most recent![]()
Alert me when this article is cited
![]()
Alert me if a correction is posted
![]()
Services ![]()
![]()
Email this article to a friend
![]()
Similar articles in this journal
![]()
Similar articles in PubMed
![]()
Alert me to new issues of the journal
![]()
Download to citation manager
![]()
![]()
Citing Articles ![]()
![]()
Citing Articles via HighWire
![]()
Citing Articles via Google Scholar
![]()
Google Scholar ![]()
![]()
Articles by Rinon, A.
![]()
Articles by Tzahor, E.
![]()
Search for Related Content
![]()
PubMed ![]()
![]()
PubMed Citation
![]()
Articles by Rinon, A.
![]()
Articles by Tzahor, E.
Research article
Cranial neural crest cells regulate head muscle patterning and differentiation during vertebrate embryogenesis
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: eldad.tzahor{at}weizmann.ac.il)
![]()
![]()

![]()
![]()
![]()
T. Grigoryan, P. Wend, A. Klaus, and W. Birchmeier
Deciphering the function of canonical Wnt signals in development and disease: conditional loss- and gain-of-function mutations of {beta}-catenin in mice
Genes & Dev.,
September 1, 2008;
22(17):
2308 - 2341.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
![]()
![]()
![]()

![]()
![]()
![]()
E. Nathan, A. Monovich, L. Tirosh-Finkel, Z. Harrelson, T. Rousso, A. Rinon, I. Harel, S. M. Evans, and E. Tzahor
The contribution of Islet1-expressing splanchnic mesoderm cells to distinct branchiomeric muscles reveals significant heterogeneity in head muscle development
Development,
February 15, 2008;
135(4):
647 - 657.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
![]()
© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2007