Regulation of the neural patterning activity of sonic hedgehog by secreted BMP inhibitors expressed by notochord and somites

Development ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 127 (22) ◽  
pp. 4855-4866 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.F. Liem ◽  
T.M. Jessell ◽  
J. Briscoe

The secretion of Sonic hedgehog (Shh) from the notochord and floor plate appears to generate a ventral-to-dorsal gradient of Shh activity that directs progenitor cell identity and neuronal fate in the ventral neural tube. In principle, the establishment of this Shh activity gradient could be achieved through the graded distribution of the Shh protein itself, or could depend on additional cell surface or secreted proteins that modify the response of neural cells to Shh. Cells of the neural plate differentiate from a region of the ectoderm that has recently expressed high levels of BMPs, raising the possibility that prospective ventral neural cells are exposed to residual levels of BMP activity. We have examined whether modulation of the level of BMP signaling regulates neural cell responses to Shh, and thus might contribute to the patterning of cell types in the ventral neural tube. Using an in vitro assay of neural cell differentiation we show that BMP signaling markedly alters neural cell responses to Shh signals, eliciting a ventral-to-dorsal switch in progenitor cell identity and neuronal fate. BMP signaling is regulated by secreted inhibitory factors, including noggin and follistatin, both of which are expressed in or adjacent to the neural plate. Conversely, follistatin but not noggin produces a dorsal-to-ventral switch in progenitor cell identity and neuronal fate in response to Shh both in vitro and in vivo. These results suggest that the specification of ventral neural cell types depends on the integration of Shh and BMP signaling activities. The net level of BMP signaling within neural tissue may be regulated by follistatin and perhaps other BMP inhibitors secreted by mesodermal cell types that flank the ventral neural tube.

Development ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 129 (10) ◽  
pp. 2459-2472 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Timmer ◽  
Charlotte Wang ◽  
Lee Niswander

In the spinal neural tube, populations of neuronal precursors that express a unique combination of transcription factors give rise to specific classes of neurons at precise locations along the dorsoventral axis. Understanding the patterning mechanisms that generate restricted gene expression along the dorsoventral axis is therefore crucial to understanding the creation of diverse neural cell types. Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) and other transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) proteins are expressed by the dorsal-most cells of the neural tube (the roofplate) and surrounding tissues, and evidence indicates that they play a role in assigning cell identity. We have manipulated the level of BMP signaling in the chicken neural tube to show that BMPs provide patterning information to both dorsal and intermediate cells. BMP regulation of the expression boundaries of the homeobox proteins Pax6, Dbx2 and Msx1 generates precursor populations with distinct developmental potentials. Within the resulting populations, thresholds of BMP act to set expression domain boundaries of developmental regulators of the homeobox and basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) families, ultimately leading to the generation of a diversity of differentiated neural cell types. This evidence strongly suggests that BMPs are the key regulators of dorsal cell identity in the spinal neural tube.


Cell ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 435-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Briscoe ◽  
Alessandra Pierani ◽  
Thomas M Jessell ◽  
Johan Ericson

Development ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 125 (6) ◽  
pp. 1005-1015 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Ericson ◽  
S. Norlin ◽  
T.M. Jessell ◽  
T. Edlund

The mechanisms by which inductive signals control the identity, proliferation and timing of differentiation of progenitor cells in establishing spatial pattern in developing vertebrate tissues remain poorly understood. We have addressed this issue in the embryonic anterior pituitary, an organ in which distinct hormone cell types are generated in a precise temporal and spatial order from an apparently homogenous ectodermal primordium. We provide evidence that in this tissue the coordinate control of progenitor cell identity, proliferation and differentiation is imposed by spatial and temporal restrictions in FGF- and BMP-mediated signals. These signals derive from adjacent neural and mesenchymal signaling centers: the infundibulum and ventral juxtapituitary mesenchyme. The infundibulum appears to have a dual signaling function, serving initially as a source of BMP4 and subsequently of FGF8. The ventral juxtapituitary mesenchyme appears to serve as a later source of BMP2 and BMP7. In vitro, FGFs promote the proliferation of progenitor cells, prevent their exit from the cell cycle and contribute to the specification of progenitor cell identity. BMPs, in contrast, have no apparent effect on cell proliferation but instead appear to act with FGFs to control the initial selection of thyrotroph and corticotroph progenitor identity.


Development ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. 105-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marysia Placzek ◽  
Toshiya Yamada ◽  
Marc Tessier-Lavigne ◽  
Thomas Jessell ◽  
Jane Dodd

Distinct classes of neural cells differentiate at specific locations within the embryonic vertebrate nervous system. To define the cellular mechanisms that control the identity and pattern of neural cells we have used a combination of functional assays and antigenic markers to examine the differentiation of cells in the developing spinal cord and hindbrain in vivo and in vitro. Our results suggest that a critical step in the dorsoventral patterning of the embryonic CNS is the differentiation of a specialized group of midline neural cells, termed the floor plate, in response to local inductive signals from the underlying notochord. The floor plate and notochord appear to control the pattern of cell types that appear along the dorsoventral axis of the neural tube. The fate of neuroepithelial cells in the ventral neural tube may be defined by cell position with respect to the ventral midline and controlled by polarizing signals that originate from the floor plate and notochord.


Cell ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 104 (6) ◽  
pp. 861-873 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas Muhr ◽  
Elisabet Andersson ◽  
Madelen Persson ◽  
Thomas M. Jessell ◽  
Johan Ericson

Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 91
Author(s):  
Verena Schultz ◽  
Stephanie L. Cumberworth ◽  
Quan Gu ◽  
Natasha Johnson ◽  
Claire L. Donald ◽  
...  

Understanding how Zika virus (Flaviviridae; ZIKV) affects neural cells is paramount in comprehending pathologies associated with infection. Whilst the effects of ZIKV in neural development are well documented, impact on the adult nervous system remains obscure. Here, we investigated the effects of ZIKV infection in established mature myelinated central nervous system (CNS) cultures. Infection incurred damage to myelinated fibers, with ZIKV-positive cells appearing when myelin damage was first detected as well as axonal pathology, suggesting the latter was a consequence of oligodendroglia infection. Transcriptome analysis revealed host factors that were upregulated during ZIKV infection. One such factor, CCL5, was validated in vitro as inhibiting myelination. Transferred UV-inactivated media from infected cultures did not damage myelin and axons, suggesting that viral replication is necessary to induce the observed effects. These data show that ZIKV infection affects CNS cells even after myelination—which is critical for saltatory conduction and neuronal function—has taken place. Understanding the targets of this virus across developmental stages including the mature CNS, and the subsequent effects of infection of cell types, is necessary to understand effective time frames for therapeutic intervention.


Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (11) ◽  
pp. 3675-3686 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.M. Stern ◽  
A.M. Brown ◽  
S.D. Hauschka

Previous studies have demonstrated that the neural tube/notochord complex is required for skeletal muscle development within somites. In order to explore the localization of myogenic inducing signals within the neural tube, dorsal or ventral neural tube halves were cultured in contact with single somites or pieces of segmental plate mesoderm. Somites and segmental plates cultured with the dorsal half of the neural tube exhibited 70% and 85% myogenic response rates, as determined by immunostaining for myosin heavy chain. This response was slightly lower than the 100% response to whole neural tube/notochord, but was much greater than the 30% and 10% myogenic response to ventral neural tube with and without notochord. These results demonstrate that the dorsal neural tube emits a potent myogenic inducing signal which accounts for most of the inductive activity of whole neural tube/notochord. However, a role for ventral neural tube/notochord in somite myogenic induction was clearly evident from the larger number of myogenic cells induced when both dorsal neural tube and ventral neural tube/notochord were present. To address the role of a specific dorsal neural tube factor in somite myogenic induction, we tested the ability of Wnt-1-expressing fibroblasts to promote paraxial mesoderm myogenesis in vitro. We found that cells expressing Wnt-1 induced a small number of somite and segmental plate cells to undergo myogenesis. This finding is consistent with the localized dorsal neural tube inductive activity described above, but since the ventral neural tube/notochord also possesses myogenic inductive capacity yet does not express Wnt-1, additional inductive factors are likely involved.


Cell ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Ericson ◽  
P Rashbass ◽  
A Schedl ◽  
S Brenner-Morton ◽  
A Kawakami ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 1892-1892
Author(s):  
Paul H. Miller ◽  
Alice M.S. Cheung ◽  
Suzan Imren ◽  
Philip A Beer ◽  
Shabnam Rostamirad ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1892 Cord blood (CB) is becoming an increasingly utilized source of cells for cancer patients who are eligible for therapies that require a transplant to rescue them from toxic side effects on their own hematopoietic cells but lack a suitable HLA-matched donor. This strategy is now routinely used in children, but delayed neutrophil and platelet recovery remain unsolved problems and these problems are exacerbated in adults. To address this issue, we first surveyed the variability in 8 individual CB harvests of parameters routinely used to predict the utility of CB units as transplants (i.e., CD34+ and in vitro myeloid clonogenic progenitor cell frequencies). In addition, we compared their 3-week outputs of CD33/15/66+ cells (neutrophils and monocytes) in the marrow and CD41a+ platelets in the blood of sublethally irradiated NSG mice after the IV transplantation of ∼104 CD34+ cells. These latter assessments were based on ongoing experiments in our lab demonstrating that, at this transplant dose, the outputs measured are linearly related to the number of CD34+ cells injected and detect transplantable progenitor cell types that are biologically distinct from cells with longer term repopulating activity. The results showed variation between CBs in all parameters, a marked lack of correlation between %CD34+ cells or % total CFCs in initial cells and %CD41a+ cells regenerated at 3 weeks/104 CD34+ cells transplanted (R=-0.28 and 0.35, respectively), and a weak correlation between the %CD33/15/66+ cells regenerated at 3 weeks/104 CD34+ cells transplanted and %CD34+ cells or % total CFCs in the initial CB cells (R values of 0.46–0.64). However, although engraftment of primitive human cells in NSG mice appears highly efficient, terminal differentiation of the myeloid lineages in these mice is poor. One possible explanation for this deficiency in mature cell output is that several of the murine growth factors responsible for regulating the production and release of these cells into the circulation in mice are not cross-reactive on human cells. We therefore hypothesized that engineering NSG mice to produce the human counterparts might significantly improve the detection of short term repopulating human cells whose maximum clone size might be limiting in NSG mice. Three potential relevant factors are IL-3, GM-CSF and Steel factor. We therefore backcrossed a line of transgenic NS mice we had created to express human IL-3, GM-CSF and Steel factor onto the NSG strain to produce homozygous NSG mice expressing all 3 of these human factors (NSG-3GS mice). We then compared these NSG-3GS mice with NSG mice in terms of their ability to stimulate the production within 3 weeks of human neutrophil-monocytes and platelets from intravenously transplanted CD34+ cells isolated from pooled CB harvests. The results showed that the levels of neutrophils and monocytes generated in the marrow of the NSG-3GS mice were elevated to levels of >50% of the marrow in 90% of the mice, even at the lowest number of CD34+ cells transplanted. Human neutrophils and monocytes were also elevated in the blood of the NSG-3GS mice where, despite the observed “saturation” of the marrow, there was a linear dose-response in the number of human neutrophils and monocytes present in the blood with increasing CD34+ cells infused. These findings are consistent with the reported activities of these molecules in vitro and in patients suggesting their physiological relevance in this murine xenograft model. We next utilized this assay to characterize the cells responsible for the neutrophil/monocyte and platelet repopulating activities detected in NSG-3GS mice. Preliminary assessment of the CD34+CD45RA- population on the basis of CD123 (IL-3 receptor alpha chain) expression indicates that the CD123+ fraction is enriched for short term (3-week) neutrophil/monocyte repopulating activity, while the CD123- fraction is enriched for short term (3-week) platelet repopulating activity. In summary, NSG-3GS mice significantly enhance the output of human cells with short term human myeloid repopulating ability thereby enabling neutrophil/monocyte outputs as well as platelet outputs to be assessed by analysis of peripheral blood samples. We have also used this tool to obtain evidence that these two outputs are derived from distinct cell types. Direct quantification of these may add to future predictions of graft quality. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (14) ◽  
pp. 3685-3694 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monika Krampert ◽  
Sridhar Reddy Chirasani ◽  
Frank-Peter Wachs ◽  
Robert Aigner ◽  
Ulrich Bogdahn ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Members of the transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) family of proteins modulate the proliferation, differentiation, and survival of many different cell types. Neural stem and progenitor cells (NPCs) in the adult brain are inhibited in their proliferation by TGF-β and by bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs). Here, we investigated neurogenesis in a hypomorphic mouse model for the TGF-β and BMP inhibitor Smad7, with the hypothesis that NPC proliferation might be reduced due to increased TGF-β and BMP signaling. Unexpectedly, we found enhanced NPC proliferation as well as an increased number of label-retaining cells in vivo. The enhanced proliferation potential of mutant cells was retained in vitro in neurosphere cultures. We observed a higher sphere-forming capacity as well as faster growth and cell cycle progression. Use of specific inhibitors revealed that these effects were independent of TGF-β and BMP signaling. The enhanced proliferation might be at least partially mediated by elevated signaling via epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor, as mutant cells showed higher expression and activation levels of the EGF receptor. Conversely, an EGF receptor inhibitor reduced the proliferation of these cells. Our data indicate that endogenous Smad7 regulates neural stem/progenitor cell proliferation in a TGF-β- and BMP-independent manner.


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