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Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus
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Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Dec 17, 2015

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Martin Lane
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Page 1: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Neural induction

Model organism: Xenopus

Page 2: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Late blastula

neurula

Page 3: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.
Page 4: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

P31. During gastrulation, tissue interaction between the involuting dorsal cells (prospective pharyngeal endoderm and dorsal mesoderm, collectively referred to as mesendoderm) and the overlying ectoderm define the region of the ectoderm that will form the nervous system and establish principal axes, and direct cells within this region towards a neural fate. This process is known as neural induction.

Page 5: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.
Page 6: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Two topics in this chapter are neural induction and axial formation

Page 7: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

discovery of neural induction

Page 8: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Hensen’s node

Page 9: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Organizer releases inductive signals.

All ectoderm are competent.

Polarity has been determined.

Page 10: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Search for the inducers

Animal cap experiment, artificial inducers, 60 years pass

Page 11: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Dissociated cells neurons (neural default)

Dominant negative experiments

Activins, Vg-1

BMPs

Activins, inhibins

Homodimer, hetrodimers

Promiscuous receptors

Page 12: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

BMP2, BMP4, BMP7

Noggin, chordin, follistatin induce primitive neural tissue

BMP inactivation triggers early neural markers, other factors are required to elicit differentiated markers

Page 13: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

WNTs as another class of neural inhibitors in animal cap explants.

Page 14: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Conserved between Drosophila and vertebrate

Page 15: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Polarity and establishment of the neuraxis

Page 16: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Early ingressing cells become prechodal plate and induce forebrain.

Late ingressing cells become notochord and induce midbrain, hindbrain, and spinal cord.

Page 17: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Where do signals come from?

Page 18: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Holtfreter, urodele

Xenopus, primitive induction OK and showed AP axis

Page 19: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Caveats of planar experiments

1. Can’t rule out vertical signals (cryptic gastrulation)

2. Deeper cells before gastrulation release cerberus

Page 20: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

The two-signal model

1. General inducers: noggin, chordin, follistatin, induce anterior-like neural tissue, NCAM, Otx2, BF1.

2. Posterior factors

3. Anterior factors, Wnt vs. Wnt antagonist

Source of inducers

1. Mesendoderm, anterior-to-posterior ingression

posterior-to-anterior translocation

2. The organizer

Page 21: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.
Page 22: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Posteriorizing signals (transforming signals)

• Retinoic acid (constitutive and dominant-negative receptors)

• FGF (avian beads)• Wnt• TGF members• Animal cap assay, beads

Page 23: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Posteriorizing signals (transforming signals)

• Retinoic acid (constitutive and dominant-negative receptors)

• FGF (avian beads)• Wnt• TGF members• Animal cap assay, beads

Forebrain marker: BF1, Otx2Midbrain marker: Otx2, Engrail

Hindbrain marker: Hox, Krox20

Page 24: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Specific pathways for head induction

Cerberus

Page 25: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Dickkopf

• In presumptive prechordal plate• Antagonist of Wnt

Activin and nodal-related factors induce posteriorization in zebrafish

Antivin converts posterior CNS into anterior

Page 26: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.
Page 27: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Competence of the ectoderm

Page 28: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Neural induction in the amniote embryo

In mouse, the anteriormost region of the neural axis is induced by signals from presumptive extraembryonic (visceral) endoderm.

Two effects of Otx2: induction, maintenance

Page 29: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

Mediolateral extent of the neural plate

• BMP conc gradient decides fate of epidermis, neural crest,

neural plate. Experiments from zebrafish.

epidermis

neural crest

neural plate

BMP conc

E NPNC

Page 30: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

epidermis

neural crest

neural plate

BMP conc

E NPNC

epidermis

neural crest

BMP conc

E NPNC

neural plate

Page 31: Neural induction Model organism: Xenopus. Late blastula neurula.

ectoderm ectodermNeural plateNC NC

Normal

BMP2-/-

Chordin-/-

Chordin-/-,somitabun