Initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activity

The generation of an embryonic body plan is the outcome of inductive interactions between the progenitor tissues that underpin their specification, regionalization and morphogenesis. The intercellular signalling activity driving these processes is deployed in a time- and site-specific manner, and th...

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Main Authors: Ruth M. Arkell, Patrick P. L. Tam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2012-01-01
Series:Open Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.120030
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spelling doaj-018d37eaffa0453db9d4fc2b8ef8859a2020-11-25T01:19:28ZengThe Royal SocietyOpen Biology2046-24412012-01-012310.1098/rsob.120030120030Initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activityRuth M. ArkellPatrick P. L. TamThe generation of an embryonic body plan is the outcome of inductive interactions between the progenitor tissues that underpin their specification, regionalization and morphogenesis. The intercellular signalling activity driving these processes is deployed in a time- and site-specific manner, and the signal strength must be precisely controlled. Receptor and ligand functions are modulated by secreted antagonists to impose a dynamic pattern of globally controlled and locally graded signals onto the tissues of early post-implantation mouse embryo. In response to the WNT, Nodal and Bone Morphogenetic Protein (BMP) signalling cascades, the embryo acquires its body plan, which manifests as differences in the developmental fate of cells located at different positions in the anterior–posterior body axis. The initial formation of the anterior (head) structures in the mouse embryo is critically dependent on the morphogenetic activity emanating from two signalling centres that are juxtaposed with the progenitor tissues of the head. A common property of these centres is that they are the source of antagonistic factors and the hub of transcriptional activities that negatively modulate the function of WNT, Nodal and BMP signalling cascades. These events generate the scaffold of the embryonic head by the early-somite stage of development. Beyond this, additional tissue interactions continue to support the growth, regionalization, differentiation and morphogenesis required for the elaboration of the structure recognizable as the embryonic head.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.120030mouse embryohead formationsignallinggene transcriptionmorphogenesis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ruth M. Arkell
Patrick P. L. Tam
spellingShingle Ruth M. Arkell
Patrick P. L. Tam
Initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activity
Open Biology
mouse embryo
head formation
signalling
gene transcription
morphogenesis
author_facet Ruth M. Arkell
Patrick P. L. Tam
author_sort Ruth M. Arkell
title Initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activity
title_short Initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activity
title_full Initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activity
title_fullStr Initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activity
title_full_unstemmed Initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activity
title_sort initiating head development in mouse embryos: integrating signalling and transcriptional activity
publisher The Royal Society
series Open Biology
issn 2046-2441
publishDate 2012-01-01
description The generation of an embryonic body plan is the outcome of inductive interactions between the progenitor tissues that underpin their specification, regionalization and morphogenesis. The intercellular signalling activity driving these processes is deployed in a time- and site-specific manner, and the signal strength must be precisely controlled. Receptor and ligand functions are modulated by secreted antagonists to impose a dynamic pattern of globally controlled and locally graded signals onto the tissues of early post-implantation mouse embryo. In response to the WNT, Nodal and Bone Morphogenetic Protein (BMP) signalling cascades, the embryo acquires its body plan, which manifests as differences in the developmental fate of cells located at different positions in the anterior–posterior body axis. The initial formation of the anterior (head) structures in the mouse embryo is critically dependent on the morphogenetic activity emanating from two signalling centres that are juxtaposed with the progenitor tissues of the head. A common property of these centres is that they are the source of antagonistic factors and the hub of transcriptional activities that negatively modulate the function of WNT, Nodal and BMP signalling cascades. These events generate the scaffold of the embryonic head by the early-somite stage of development. Beyond this, additional tissue interactions continue to support the growth, regionalization, differentiation and morphogenesis required for the elaboration of the structure recognizable as the embryonic head.
topic mouse embryo
head formation
signalling
gene transcription
morphogenesis
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.120030
work_keys_str_mv AT ruthmarkell initiatingheaddevelopmentinmouseembryosintegratingsignallingandtranscriptionalactivity
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