Cell-matrix interactions in the early mouse embryo

Author(s):  
A.E. Sutherland ◽  
P.G. Calarco ◽  
C.H. Damsky

Cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions mediated by the integrin family of receptors are critical for morphogenesis and may also play a regulatory role in differentiation during early development. We have examined the onset of expression of individual integrin subunit proteins in the early mouse embryo, and their roles in early morphogenetic events. As detected by immunoprecipitation, the α6, αV, β1, and β3 subunits are detected as early as the 4-cell stage, α5 at the hatched blastocyst stage and αl and α3 following blastocyst attachment. We tested the role of these integrins in the attachment and migratory activity of two cell populations of the early mouse embryo: the trophoblast giant cells, which invade the uterine stroma and ultimately contribute to the chorio-allantoic placenta, and the parietal endoderm, which migrates over the inner surface of the trophoblast and ultimately forms Reichert's membrane and the parietal yolk sac. Experiments were done in serum-free medium on substrates coated with laminin (Ln) and fibronectin (Fn). Trophoblast outgrowth occurs on Ln and its E8 fragment (long arm), but not on the E1’ fragment (cross region) (Figs. 1, 2 ). This outgrowth is inhibited by anti-E8, anti-Ln, and by the anti-β1 family antiserum anti-ECMR, but not by anti-αV or the function-perturbing GoH3 antibody that recognizes the α6/β1 integrin, a major Ln (E8) receptor. This suggests that trophoblast outgrowth on Ln or E8 is mediated by a different β1 integrin such as α3/β1. Early stages of trophoblast outgrowth (up to 48 hours) on Fn are inhibited by anti-Fn and by function-perturbing anti-αV antibodies, whereas at later times outgrowth becomes insensitive to anti-αV but remains sensitive to the anti-β1 family antiserum anti-ECMr, indicating that trophoblast cells modulate their interaction with Fn during outgrowth. Trophoblast outgrowth on vitronectin (Vn) is sensitive to anti-αV antibodies throughout the 5-day period examined.

2007 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 1622-1625 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Ribet ◽  
Sophie Louvet-Vallée ◽  
Francis Harper ◽  
Nathalie de Parseval ◽  
Marie Dewannieux ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Viruslike particles which displayed a peculiar wheellike appearance that distinguished them from A-, B- or C-type particles had previously been described in the early mouse embryo. The maximum expression of these so-called epsilon particles was observed in two-cell-stage embryos, followed by their rapid decline at later stages of development and no particles detected at the zygote one-cell stage. Here, we show that these particles are in fact produced by a newly discovered murine endogenous retrovirus (ERV) belonging to the widespread family of mammalian ERV-L elements and named MuERV-L. Using antibodies that we raised against the Gag protein of these elements, Western blot analysis and in toto immunofluorescence studies of the embryos at various stages disclosed the same developmental expression profile as that observed for epsilon particles. Using expression vectors for cloned, full-length, entirely coding MuERV-L copies and cell transfection, direct identification of the epsilon particles was finally achieved by high-resolution electron microscopy.


2018 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 245
Author(s):  
N. Plachta

Our goal is to reveal how mammalian cells resolve their fate, shape, and position in the body in real time. Understanding how these decisions are made is critical to realise how embryos form and what problems compromise human fertility. Yet, their real-time control in vivo remains unknown. Because fixed specimens cannot capture cell dynamics, we established imaging technologies to study cells directly in live mouse embryos. We recently showed how transcription factors search and bind to the DNA to determine the first cell fates of the embryo. We found that differences in the binding of the transcription factor Sox2 to DNA appear as early as the 4-cell stage of development and predict cell fate. We also discovered that as cell choose their initial fates, they extend long filopodia protrusions to pull their neighbour cells closer, revealing a mechanism for embryo compaction and polarization. Finally, we established techniques to image how dynamic changes in the organisation of the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons regulate the first spatial segregation of inner and outer cells to form the future pluripotent inner mass and placental tissues of the embryo. Together, our findings reveal some of the key dynamic mechanisms that pattern the early mouse embryo.


1982 ◽  
Vol 23 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 141-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
W.K.G. Krietsch ◽  
R. Fundele ◽  
G.W.K. Kuntz ◽  
M. Fehlau ◽  
K. Bürki ◽  
...  

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