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Published February 15, 2004 | public
Journal Article

Combined intrinsic and extrinsic influences pattern cranial neural crest migration and pharyngeal arch morphogenesis in axolotl

Abstract

Cranial neural crest cells migrate in a precisely segmented manner to form cranial ganglia, facial skeleton and other derivatives. Here, we investigate the mechanisms underlying this patterning in the axolotl embryo using a combination of tissue culture, molecular markers, scanning electron microscopy and vital dye analysis. In vitro experiments reveal an intrinsic component to segmental migration; neural crest cells from the hindbrain segregate into distinct streams even in the absence of neighboring tissue. In vivo, separation between neural crest streams is further reinforced by tight juxtapositions that arise during early migration between epidermis and neural tube, mesoderm and endoderm. The neural crest streams are dense and compact, with the cells migrating under the epidermis and outside the paraxial and branchial arch mesoderm with which they do not mix. After entering the branchial arches, neural crest cells conduct an "outside-in" movement, which subsequently brings them medially around the arch core such that they gradually ensheath the arch mesoderm in a manner that has been hypothesized but not proven in zebrafish. This study, which represents the most comprehensive analysis of cranial neural crest migratory pathways in any vertebrate, suggests a dual process for patterning the cranial neural crest. Together with an intrinsic tendency to form separate streams, neural crest cells are further constrained into channels by close tissue apposition and sorting out from neighboring tissues.

Additional Information

© 2003 Elsevier Inc. Received for publication 10 May 2003, revised 15 August 2003, accepted 9 September 2003. Available online 4 December 2003. We thank Tanya Moreno for the GFP mRNA, Irmin Beck for help in artwork, and Torsten Schwalm and Lewan Mtschedlischwili for technical advice. Support from NIH grant HD15527 and NASA grant NAG 2-1585 to M.B.F. and Herbert-Quandt Stiftung, SMWK, COST B-23, MSMT grant 1311004 and a NATO Science Fellowships Programme to R.C.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023