Local apoptosis modulates early mammalian brain development through the elimination of morphogen-producing cells.

نویسندگان

  • Keiko Nonomura
  • Yoshifumi Yamaguchi
  • Misato Hamachi
  • Masato Koike
  • Yasuo Uchiyama
  • Kenichi Nakazato
  • Atsushi Mochizuki
  • Asako Sakaue-Sawano
  • Atsushi Miyawaki
  • Hiroki Yoshida
  • Keisuke Kuida
  • Masayuki Miura
چکیده

Apoptotic cells are observed in the early developing brain. Apoptosis deficiency is proposed to cause brain overgrowth, but here we show that brain malformations in apoptosis-deficient mutants are due to insufficient brain ventricle expansion as a result of uncompleted cranial neural tube closure. Apoptosis eliminates Fgf8-expressing cells in the anterior neural ridge (ANR), which acts as an organizing center of the forebrain by producing FGF8 morphogen. Deficiency of apoptosis leads to the accumulation of undead and nonproliferative cells in the ventral part of the ANR. The undead cells in apoptosis-deficient mutants express Fgf8 continuously, which perturbs gene expression in the ventral forebrain. Thus, apoptosis within a specific subdomain of the ANR is required for correct temporal elimination of an FGF8-producing region within a limited developmental time window, thereby ensuring proper forebrain development.

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Developmental cell

دوره 27 6  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2013