Clonal and molecular analysis of the prospective anterior neural boundary in the mouse embryo

Author:

Cajal Marieke1,Lawson Kirstie A.2,Hill Bill2,Moreau Anne1,Rao Jianguo2,Ross Allyson2,Collignon Jérôme1,Camus Anne1

Affiliation:

1. Université Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Institut Jacques Monod, UMR7592 CNRS, F-75013 Paris, France.

2. MRC Human Genetics Unit at the MRC Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine at the University of Edinburgh, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, UK.

Abstract

In the mouse embryo the anterior ectoderm undergoes extensive growth and morphogenesis to form the forebrain and cephalic non-neural ectoderm. We traced descendants of single ectoderm cells to study cell fate choice and cell behaviour at late gastrulation. In addition, we provide a comprehensive spatiotemporal atlas of anterior gene expression at stages crucial for anterior ectoderm regionalisation and neural plate formation. Our results show that, at late gastrulation stage, expression patterns of anterior ectoderm genes overlap significantly and correlate with areas of distinct prospective fates but do not define lineages. The fate map delineates a rostral limit to forebrain contribution. However, no early subdivision of the presumptive forebrain territory can be detected. Lineage analysis at single-cell resolution revealed that precursors of the anterior neural ridge (ANR), a signalling centre involved in forebrain development and patterning, are clonally related to neural ectoderm. The prospective ANR and the forebrain neuroectoderm arise from cells scattered within the same broad area of anterior ectoderm. This study establishes that although the segregation between non-neural and neural precursors in the anterior midline ectoderm is not complete at late gastrulation stage, this tissue already harbours elements of regionalisation that prefigure the later organisation of the head.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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