Literature DB >> 9550712

Continuing organizer function during chick tail development.

V Knezevic1, R De Santo, S Mackem.   

Abstract

Development of the posterior body (lumbosacral region and tail) in vertebrates is delayed relative to gastrulation. In amniotes, it proceeds with the replacement of the regressed node and primitive streak by a caudal blastema-like mass of mesenchyme known as the tail bud. Despite apparent morphological dissimilarities, recent results suggest that tail development in amniotes is in essence a continuation of gastrulation, as is the case in Xenopus. However, this has been inferred primarily from the outcome of fate mapping studies demonstrating discrete, regionalized cell populations in the tail bud, like those present at gastrulation. Our analysis of the tail bud distribution of several molecular markers that are expressed in specific spatial domains during chick gastrulation confirms these results. Furthermore, we present evidence that gastrulation-like ingression movements from the surface continue in the early chick tail bud and that the established tail bud retains organizer activity. This 'tail organizer' has the expected properties of being able to recruit uncommitted host cells into a new embryonic axis and induce host neural tissue with posteriorly regionalized gene expression when grafted to competent host cells that are otherwise destined to form only extra-embryonic tissue. Together, these results indicate that chick tail development is mechanistically continuous with gastrulation and that the developing tail in chick may serve as a useful experimental adjunct to investigate the molecular basis of inductive interactions operating during gastrulation, considering that residual tail organizing activity is still present at a surprisingly late stage.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9550712     DOI: 10.1242/dev.125.10.1791

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


  16 in total

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3.  The cessation of gastrulation: BMP signaling and EMT during and at the end of gastrulation.

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5.  Canonical Wnt signaling dynamically controls multiple stem cell fate decisions during vertebrate body formation.

Authors:  Benjamin L Martin; David Kimelman
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6.  Effects of the curly tail genotype on neuroepithelial integrity and cell proliferation during late stages of primary neurulation.

Authors:  M Hall; F Gofflot; S Iseki; G M Morriss-Kay
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2001-12       Impact factor: 2.610

7.  Hox genes control vertebrate body elongation by collinear Wnt repression.

Authors:  Nicolas Denans; Tadahiro Iimura; Olivier Pourquié
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8.  Bmp inhibition is necessary for post-gastrulation patterning and morphogenesis of the zebrafish tailbud.

Authors:  Richard H Row; David Kimelman
Journal:  Dev Biol       Date:  2009-02-21       Impact factor: 3.582

9.  The chick somitogenesis oscillator is arrested before all paraxial mesoderm is segmented into somites.

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Review 10.  Establishment of Hox vertebral identities in the embryonic spine precursors.

Authors:  Tadahiro Iimura; Nicolas Denans; Olivier Pourquié
Journal:  Curr Top Dev Biol       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 4.897

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