A novel signal induces
a segmentation fissure by acting in a ventral-to-dorsal direction in the
presomitic mesoderm
Sato Y and Takahashi Y
Dev Biol 282(1):183-91 (2005)
SUMMARY
We describe here a novel inductive action that operates during somitic
segmentation in chicken embryos. We previously reported that the posterior
border cells located at a next-forming boundary in the anterior end of
the presomitic mesoderm (PSM) exhibit an inductive activity that acts
on the anterior cells to cause the formation of a somitic fissure (Sato,
Y., Yasuda, K., Takahashi, Y., 2002. Morphological boundary forms by a
novel inductive event mediated by Lunatic fringe and Notch during somitic
segmentation. Development 129, 3633-3644). In this study, we have found
a second inductive action along the dorso-ventral (D-V) axis during fissure
formation. When relocated into a non-segmenting region of PSM, the ventral-most
cells taken from the presumptive boundary are sufficient to induce an
ectopic fissure in host cells. The ventrally derived signal acts in a
ventral-to-dorsal direction but not ventrally, regardless of where the
ventral cells are placed. This directional signaling is governed, at least
in part, by the signal-receiving cells of the PSM, which we found to be
polarized along the D-V axis, and also by intimate cell-cell interactions.
Finally, we have observed that morphological segmentation is able to rearrange
the anterior and posterior regionalization of individual somites. These
findings suggest that discrete unidirectional signals along both the antero-posterior
and the D-V axes act coordinately to achieve the formation of the intersomitic
fissure, and also that fissure formation is important for the fine-tuning
of A-P regionalization in individual somites.
LINK
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