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Leader Cells Define Directionality of Trunk, but Not Cranial, Neural Crest Cell Migration

Authors :
Royal Society (UK)
Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica (Chile)
Richardson, Jo
Gauert, Anton
Briones Montecinos, Luis
Fanlo, Lucía
Alhashem, Zainalabdeen Mohmammed
Assar, Rodrigo
Martí, Elisa
Kabla, Alexandre
Härtel, Steffen
Linker, Claudia
Royal Society (UK)
Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica (Chile)
Richardson, Jo
Gauert, Anton
Briones Montecinos, Luis
Fanlo, Lucía
Alhashem, Zainalabdeen Mohmammed
Assar, Rodrigo
Martí, Elisa
Kabla, Alexandre
Härtel, Steffen
Linker, Claudia
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Collective cell migration is fundamental for life and a hallmark of cancer. Neural crest (NC) cells migrate collectively, but the mechanisms governing this process remain controversial. Previous analyses in Xenopus indicate that cranial NC (CNC) cells are a homogeneous population relying on cell-cell interactions for directional migration, while chick embryo analyses suggest a heterogeneous population with leader cells instructing directionality. Our data in chick and zebrafish embryos show that CNC cells do not require leader cells for migration and all cells present similar migratory capacities. In contrast, laser ablation of trunk NC (TNC) cells shows that leader cells direct movement and cell-cell contacts are required for migration. Moreover, leader and follower identities are acquired before the initiation of migration and remain fixed thereafter. Thus, two distinct mechanisms establish the directionality of CNC cells and TNC cells. This implies the existence of multiple molecular mechanisms for collective cell migration.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1103434389
Document Type :
Electronic Resource