Mitogenic effect of muscle on the neuroepithelium of the developing spinal cord

Author:

Fontaine-Perus J.C.1,Chanconie M.1,Le Douarin N.M.1,Gershon M.D.1,Rothman T.P.1

Affiliation:

1. Universite de Nantes, CNRS URA 1340, Faculte des Sciences, France.

Abstract

A previous study revealed that segments of bowel grafted between the neural tube and somites of a younger chick host embryo would induce a unilateral increase in cellularity of the host's neural tube. The current experiments were done to test the hypotheses that muscle tissue in the wall of the gut is responsible for this growth-promoting effect and that the spinal cord enlargement is the result of a mitogenic action on the neuroepithelium. Fragments of skeletal (E8-15) or cardiac muscle (E4-14) were removed from quail embryos and grafted between the neural tube and somites of chick host embryos (E2). Both skeletal and cardiac muscle grafts mimicked the effect of bowel and induced an increase in cell number as well as a unilateral enlargement of the region of the host's neural tube immediately adjacent to the grafts. The growth-promoting effect of muscle-containing grafts was restricted to the neural tube itself and was not seen in proximate dorsal root or sympathetic ganglia. The action of the grafts of muscle was neither species- nor class-specific, since enlargement of the neural tube was observed following implantation of fetal mouse skeletal muscle into quail hosts. Grafts of skeletal muscle or gut increased the number of cells taking up [3H]thymidine in the host's neuroepithelium as early as 9 h following implantation of a graft. The increase in the number of cells entering the S phase of the cell cycle preceded the increase in cell number. These observations demonstrate that muscle-containing tissues can increase the rate of proliferation of neuroepithelial cells when these tissues are experimentally placed together.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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