interkinetic nuclear migration
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2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mamoru Ishii ◽  
Tomoko Tateya ◽  
Michiyuki Matsuda ◽  
Tsuyoshi Hirashima

The bending of epithelial tubes is a fundamental process in organ morphogenesis, driven by various multicellular behaviours. The cochlea in the mammalian inner ear is a representative example of spiral tissue architecture where the continuous bending of the duct is a fundamental component of its morphogenetic process. Although the cochlear duct morphogenesis has been studied by genetic approaches extensively, it is still unclear how the cochlear duct morphology is physically formed. Here, we report that nuclear behaviour changes are associated with the curvature of the pseudostratified epithelium during murine cochlear development. Two-photon live-cell imaging reveals that the nuclei shuttle between the luminal and basal edges of the cell is in phase with cell-cycle progression, known as interkinetic nuclear migration, in the flat region of the pseudostratified epithelium. However, the nuclei become stationary on the luminal side following mitosis in the curved region. Mathematical modelling together with perturbation experiments shows that this nuclear stalling facilitates luminal-basal differential growth within the epithelium, suggesting that the nuclear stalling would contribute to the bending of the pseudostratified epithelium during the cochlear duct development. The findings suggest a possible scenario of differential growth which sculpts the tissue shape, driven by collective nuclear dynamics.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesca Napoli ◽  
Christina M Daly ◽  
Stephanie Neal ◽  
Kyle J McCulloch ◽  
Alexandra Zaloga ◽  
...  

Neurogenesis, the regulation of cellular proliferation and differentiation in the developing nervous system, is the process that underlies the diversity of size and cell type found in animal nervous systems. Our understanding of how this process has evolved is limited because of the lack of high resolution data and live-imaging methods across species. The retina is a classic model for the study of neurogenesis in vertebrates and live-imaging of the retina has shown that during development, progenitor cells are organized in a pseudostratified neuroepithelium and nuclei migrate in coordination with the cell cycle along the apicobasal axis of the cell, a process called interkinetic nuclear migration. Eventually cells delaminate and differentiate within the boundaries of the epithelium. This process has been considered unique to vertebrates and thought to be important in maintaining organization during the development of a complex nervous system. Coleoid cephalopods, including squid, cuttlefish and octopus, have the largest nervous system of any invertebrate and convergently-evolved camera-type eyes, making them a compelling comparative system to vertebrates. Here we have pioneered live-imaging techniques to show that the squid, Doryteuthis pealeii, displays cellular mechanisms during cephalopod retinal neurogenesis that are hallmarks of vertebrate processes. We find that retinal progenitor cells in the squid undergo interkinetic nuclear migration until they exit the cell cycle, we identify retinal organization corresponding to progenitor, post-mitotic and differentiated cells, and we find that Notch signaling regulates this process. With cephalopods and vertebrates having diverged 550 million years ago, these results suggest that mechanisms thought to be unique to vertebrates may be common to highly proliferative neurogenic primordia contributing to a large nervous system.


Author(s):  
Brian S. Clark ◽  
Joel B. Miesfeld ◽  
Michael A. Flinn ◽  
Ross F. Collery ◽  
Brian A. Link

Interkinetic nuclear migration (IKNM) is the process in which pseudostratified epithelial nuclei oscillate from the apical to basal surface and in phase with the mitotic cycle. In the zebrafish retina, neuroepithelial retinal progenitor cells (RPCs) increase Notch activity with apical movement of the nuclei, and the depth of nuclear migration correlates with the probability that the next cell division will be neurogenic. This study focuses on the mechanisms underlying the relationships between IKNM, cell signaling, and neurogenesis. In particular, we have explored the role IKNM has on endosome biology within RPCs. Through genetic manipulation and live imaging in zebrafish, we find that early (Rab5-positive) and recycling (Rab11a-positive) endosomes polarize in a dynamic fashion within RPCs and with reference to nuclear position. Functional analyses suggest that dynamic polarization of recycling endosomes and their activity within the neuroepithelia modulates the subcellular localization of Crb2a, consequently affecting multiple signaling pathways that impact neurogenesis including Notch, Hippo, and Wnt activities. As nuclear migration is heterogenous and asynchronous among RPCs, Rab11a-affected signaling within the neuroepithelia is modulated in a differential manner, providing mechanistic insight to the correlation of IKNM and selection of RPCs to undergo neurogenesis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tiane Chen ◽  
Maged Zeineldin ◽  
Blake Johnson ◽  
Yi Dong ◽  
Akshay Narkar ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAlthough much is known about the gene mutations required to drive colorectal cancer (CRC) initiation, the tissue-specific selective microenvironments in which neoplasia arises remains less characterized. Here, we determined whether modulation of intestinal stem cell niche morphogens alone can exert a neoplasia-relevant selective pressure on normal colonic epithelium. Using adult stem cell-derived murine colonic epithelial organoids (colonoids), we employed a strategy of sustained withdrawal of EGF and EGFR inhibition to select for and expand survivors. EGFR-signaling-independent (iEGFR) colonoids emerged over rounds of selection and expansion. Colonoids derived from a mouse model of chronic mucosal injury showed an enhanced ability to adapt to EGFR inhibition. Whole-exome and transcriptomic analyses of iEGFR colonoids demonstrated acquisition of deleterious mutations and altered expression of genes implicated in EGF signaling, pyroptosis, and CRC. iEGFR colonoids acquired dysplasia-associated cytomorphologic changes, an increased proliferative rate, and the ability to survive independently of other required niche factors. These changes were accompanied by emergence of aneuploidy and chromosomal instability; further, the observed mitotic segregation errors were significantly associated with loss of interkinetic nuclear migration, a fundamental and dynamic process underlying intestinal epithelial homeostasis. This study provides key evidence that chromosomal instability and other phenotypes associated with neoplasia can be induced ex vivo via adaptation to EGF withdrawal in normal and stably euploid colonic epithelium, without introducing cancer-associated driver mutations. In addition, prior mucosal injury accelerates this evolutionary process.Key definitionsColonoids: adult stem cell-derived colonic epithelial organoidsiEGFR: in vitro selective conditions devoid of EGF (epidermal growth factor) and including an EGFR (EGF receptor) inhibitor 1iEGFR colonoids: colonoids tolerant to iEGFR culture conditions with growth and survival similar to unselected passage-matched controlsINM: Interkinetic nuclear migration


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhigang Xie ◽  
Vytas A. Bankaitis

The mammalian neocortex undergoes explosive expansion during embryonic development. From an evolutionary perspective, higher complexity of the neocortex is accompanied by a prominent expansion in its lateral dimension so that the neocortical surface area is increased. Expansion in the radial dimension throughout evolution is limited so that neocortical thickness is strongly restricted1–3. The underlying mechanisms for restricting neocortical thickness remain unclear. Expansion of the developing mouse neocortex is driven by neurogenesis which is itself primarily fueled by neural stem cells (NSCs). NSCs form a pseudostratified epithelium and exhibit a hallmark cell cycle-dependent nuclear movement termed interkinetic nuclear migration (IKNM) 2–4. While IKNM plays a critical role in cell fate determination, it remains a poorly understood process. Herein, we demonstrate IKNM relies on a phosphatidylinositol transfer protein (PITP)-noncanonical planar cell polarity (ncPCP) signaling axis that restricts radial expansion of the developing neocortex. Ablation of PITPα/PITPβ in NSCs compromised IKNM -- resulting in a thickened neocortex and perturbed curvature of its ventricular surface. Those phenotypic derangements in IKNM and neocortical morphogenesis were recapitulated in mouse embryos individually ablated for two ncPCP receptor gene activities and in a mosaic neocortex expressing a dominant-negative variant of a third ncPCP receptor. Finally, PITP signaling links to ncPCP pathway activity by promoting membrane trafficking of a subset of ncPCP receptors from the trans-Golgi network to the NSC cell surface. We conclude IKNM is a driving force for a special form of convergent extension regulated by coupling PITP-mediated phosphoinositide signaling with activity of the evolutionarily conserved ncPCP pathway.


eLife ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Afnan Azizi ◽  
Anne Herrmann ◽  
Yinan Wan ◽  
Salvador JRP Buse ◽  
Philipp J Keller ◽  
...  

An important question in early neural development is the origin of stochastic nuclear movement between apical and basal surfaces of neuroepithelia during interkinetic nuclear migration. Tracking of nuclear subpopulations has shown evidence of diffusion - mean squared displacements growing linearly in time - and suggested crowding from cell division at the apical surface drives basalward motion. Yet, this hypothesis has not yet been tested, and the forces involved not quantified. We employ long-term, rapid light-sheet and two-photon imaging of early zebrafish retinogenesis to track entire populations of nuclei within the tissue. The time-varying concentration profiles show clear evidence of crowding as nuclei reach close-packing and are quantitatively described by a nonlinear diffusion model. Considerations of nuclear motion constrained inside the enveloping cell membrane show that concentration-dependent stochastic forces inside cells, compatible in magnitude to those found in cytoskeletal transport, can explain the observed magnitude of the diffusion constant.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Afnan Azizi ◽  
Anne Herrmann ◽  
Yinan Wan ◽  
Salvador JRP Buse ◽  
Philipp J Keller ◽  
...  

Science ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 369 (6505) ◽  
pp. 787-793 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monia Barnat ◽  
Mariacristina Capizzi ◽  
Esther Aparicio ◽  
Susana Boluda ◽  
Doris Wennagel ◽  
...  

Although Huntington’s disease is a late-manifesting neurodegenerative disorder, both mouse studies and neuroimaging studies of presymptomatic mutation carriers suggest that Huntington’s disease might affect neurodevelopment. To determine whether this is actually the case, we examined tissue from human fetuses (13 weeks gestation) that carried the Huntington’s disease mutation. These tissues showed clear abnormalities in the developing cortex, including mislocalization of mutant huntingtin and junctional complex proteins, defects in neuroprogenitor cell polarity and differentiation, abnormal ciliogenesis, and changes in mitosis and cell cycle progression. We observed the same phenomena in Huntington’s disease mouse embryos, where we linked these abnormalities to defects in interkinetic nuclear migration of progenitor cells. Huntington’s disease thus has a neurodevelopmental component and is not solely a degenerative disease.


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