CELÁ, Petra, marcela BUCHTOVÁ, Iva VESELÁ, Cathy FU, Jean-Philippe BOGARDI, Yiping SONG, Amanda BARLOW, Paul BUXTON, Jiřina MEDALOVÁ, Philippa FRANCIS-WEST and Joy M. RICHMAN. BMP Signaling Regulates the Fate of Chondro-osteoprogenitor Cells in Facial Mesenchyme in a Stage-Specific Manner. DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS. Hoboken, NJ USA: WILEY-BLACKWELL, 2016, vol. 245, No 9, p. 947-962. ISSN 1058-8388. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/DVDY.24422.
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Basic information
Original name BMP Signaling Regulates the Fate of Chondro-osteoprogenitor Cells in Facial Mesenchyme in a Stage-Specific Manner
Authors CELÁ, Petra (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution), marcela BUCHTOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Iva VESELÁ (203 Czech Republic), Cathy FU (124 Canada), Jean-Philippe BOGARDI (124 Canada), Yiping SONG (124 Canada), Amanda BARLOW (124 Canada), Paul BUXTON (124 Canada), Jiřina MEDALOVÁ (203 Czech Republic), Philippa FRANCIS-WEST (124 Canada) and Joy M. RICHMAN (124 Canada).
Edition DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS, Hoboken, NJ USA, WILEY-BLACKWELL, 2016, 1058-8388.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 10605 Developmental biology
Country of publisher United States of America
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Impact factor Impact factor: 2.004
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14310/16:00099784
Organization unit Faculty of Science
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/DVDY.24422
UT WoS 000384752100005
Keywords in English BMP; chick embryo; Chondro-osteoprogenitor Cells ; facial development
Tags NZ, rivok
Changed by Changed by: Ing. Nicole Zrilić, učo 240776. Changed: 13/4/2018 12:49.
Abstract
Lineage tracing has shown that most of the facial skeleton is derived from cranial neural crest cells. However, the local signals that influence postmigratory, neural crest-derived mesenchyme also play a major role in patterning the skeleton. Here, we study the role of BMP signaling in regulating the fate of chondro-osteoprogenitor cells in the face. A single Noggin-soaked bead inserted into stage 15 chicken embryos induced an ectopic cartilage resembling the interorbital septum within the palate and other midline structures. In contrast, the same treatment in stage 20 embryos caused a loss of bones. The molecular basis for the stage-specific response to Noggin lay in the simultaneous up-regulation of SOX9 and downregulation of RUNX2 in the maxillary mesenchyme, increased cell adhesiveness as shown by N-cadherin induction around the beads and increased RA pathway gene expression. None of these changes were observed in stage 20 embryos.These experiments demonstrate how slight changes in expression of growth factors such as BMPs could lead to gain or loss of cartilage in the upper jaw during vertebrate evolution. In addition, BMPs have at least two roles: one in patterning the skull and another in regulating the skeletogenic fates of neural crest-derived mesenchyme.
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