Literature DB >> 15653949

A dual fate of the hindlimb muscle mass: cloacal/perineal musculature develops from leg muscle cells.

Petr Valasek1, Darrell J R Evans, Flavio Maina, Milos Grim, Ketan Patel.   

Abstract

The cloaca serves as a common opening to the urinary and digestive systems. In most mammals, the cloaca is present only during embryogenesis, after which it undergoes a series of septation events leading to the formation of the anal canal and parts of the urogenital tract. During embryogenesis it is surrounded by skeletal muscle. The origin and the mechanisms regulating the development of these muscles have never been determined. Here, we show that the cloacal muscles of the chick originate from somites 30-34, which overlap the domain that gives rise to leg muscles (somites 26-33). Using molecular and cell labelling protocols, we have determined the aetiology of cloacal muscles. Surprisingly, we found that chick cloacal myoblasts first migrate into the developing leg bud and then extend out of the ventral muscle mass towards the cloacal tubercle. The development of homologous cloacal/perineal muscles was also examined in the mouse. Concordant with the results in birds, we found that perineal muscles in mammals also develop from the ventral muscle mass of the hindlimb. We provide genetic evidence that the perineal muscles are migratory, like limb muscles, by showing that they are absent in metd/d mutants. Using experimental embryological procedures (in chick) and genetic models (in chick and mouse), we show that the development of the cloacal musculature is dependent on proximal leg field formation. Thus, we have discovered a novel developmental mechanism in vertebrates whereby muscle cells first migrate from axially located somites to the pelvic limb, then extend towards the midline and only then differentiate into the single cloacal/perineal muscles.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15653949     DOI: 10.1242/dev.01545

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Development        ISSN: 0950-1991            Impact factor:   6.868


  11 in total

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Review 2.  Myogenesis and muscle regeneration.

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5.  Reappraisal of intergender differences in the urethral striated sphincter explains why a completely circular arrangement is difficult in females: a histological study using human fetuses.

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7.  Nonmyocytic androgen receptor regulates the sexually dimorphic development of the embryonic bulbocavernosus muscle.

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8.  Systematic stereoscopic analyses for cloacal development: The origin of anorectal malformations.

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9.  Reorganization of mammalian body wall patterning with cloacal septation.

Authors:  Margaret I Hall; José R Rodriguez-Sosa; Jeffrey H Plochocki
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-08-23       Impact factor: 4.379

10.  The body region specificity in murine models of muscle regeneration and atrophy.

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Journal:  Acta Physiol (Oxf)       Date:  2020-09-17       Impact factor: 6.311

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