Live Tissue Imaging Sheds Light on Cell Level Events During Ectodermal Organ Development

Embryonic development of ectodermal organs involves a very dynamic range of cellular events and, therefore, requires advanced techniques to visualize them. Ectodermal organogenesis proceeds in well-defined sequential stages mediated by tissue interactions. Different ectodermal organs feature shared...

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Main Authors: Isabel Mogollón, Laura Ahtiainen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2020.00818/full
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spelling doaj-d13e710d8d87470481ee46c8259a8c9d2020-11-25T03:52:20ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2020-07-011110.3389/fphys.2020.00818553771Live Tissue Imaging Sheds Light on Cell Level Events During Ectodermal Organ DevelopmentIsabel MogollónLaura AhtiainenEmbryonic development of ectodermal organs involves a very dynamic range of cellular events and, therefore, requires advanced techniques to visualize them. Ectodermal organogenesis proceeds in well-defined sequential stages mediated by tissue interactions. Different ectodermal organs feature shared morphological characteristics, which are regulated by conserved and reiterative signaling pathways. A wealth of genetic information on the expression patterns and interactions of specific signaling pathways has accumulated over the years. However, the conventional developmental biology methods have mainly relied on two-dimensional tissue histological analyses at fixed time points limiting the possibilities to follow the processes in real time on a single cell resolution. This has complicated the interpretation of cause and effect relationships and mechanisms of the successive events. Whole-mount tissue live imaging approaches are now revealing how reshaping of the epithelial sheet for the initial placodal thickening, budding morphogenesis and beyond, involve coordinated four dimensional changes in cell shapes, well-orchestrated cell movements and specific cell proliferation and apoptosis patterns. It is becoming evident that the interpretation of the reiterative morphogenic signals takes place dynamically at the cellular level. Depending on the context, location, and timing they drive different cell fate choices and cellular interactions regulating a pattern of behaviors that ultimately defines organ shapes and sizes. Here we review how new tissue models, advances in 3D and live tissue imaging techniques have brought new understanding on the cell level behaviors that contribute to the highly dynamic stages of morphogenesis in teeth, hair and related ectodermal organs during development, and in dysplasia contexts.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2020.00818/fullectodermalimagingwhole-mountexplant cultureembryonic developmentcell cycle
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isabel Mogollón
Laura Ahtiainen
spellingShingle Isabel Mogollón
Laura Ahtiainen
Live Tissue Imaging Sheds Light on Cell Level Events During Ectodermal Organ Development
Frontiers in Physiology
ectodermal
imaging
whole-mount
explant culture
embryonic development
cell cycle
author_facet Isabel Mogollón
Laura Ahtiainen
author_sort Isabel Mogollón
title Live Tissue Imaging Sheds Light on Cell Level Events During Ectodermal Organ Development
title_short Live Tissue Imaging Sheds Light on Cell Level Events During Ectodermal Organ Development
title_full Live Tissue Imaging Sheds Light on Cell Level Events During Ectodermal Organ Development
title_fullStr Live Tissue Imaging Sheds Light on Cell Level Events During Ectodermal Organ Development
title_full_unstemmed Live Tissue Imaging Sheds Light on Cell Level Events During Ectodermal Organ Development
title_sort live tissue imaging sheds light on cell level events during ectodermal organ development
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Embryonic development of ectodermal organs involves a very dynamic range of cellular events and, therefore, requires advanced techniques to visualize them. Ectodermal organogenesis proceeds in well-defined sequential stages mediated by tissue interactions. Different ectodermal organs feature shared morphological characteristics, which are regulated by conserved and reiterative signaling pathways. A wealth of genetic information on the expression patterns and interactions of specific signaling pathways has accumulated over the years. However, the conventional developmental biology methods have mainly relied on two-dimensional tissue histological analyses at fixed time points limiting the possibilities to follow the processes in real time on a single cell resolution. This has complicated the interpretation of cause and effect relationships and mechanisms of the successive events. Whole-mount tissue live imaging approaches are now revealing how reshaping of the epithelial sheet for the initial placodal thickening, budding morphogenesis and beyond, involve coordinated four dimensional changes in cell shapes, well-orchestrated cell movements and specific cell proliferation and apoptosis patterns. It is becoming evident that the interpretation of the reiterative morphogenic signals takes place dynamically at the cellular level. Depending on the context, location, and timing they drive different cell fate choices and cellular interactions regulating a pattern of behaviors that ultimately defines organ shapes and sizes. Here we review how new tissue models, advances in 3D and live tissue imaging techniques have brought new understanding on the cell level behaviors that contribute to the highly dynamic stages of morphogenesis in teeth, hair and related ectodermal organs during development, and in dysplasia contexts.
topic ectodermal
imaging
whole-mount
explant culture
embryonic development
cell cycle
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2020.00818/full
work_keys_str_mv AT isabelmogollon livetissueimagingshedslightoncellleveleventsduringectodermalorgandevelopment
AT lauraahtiainen livetissueimagingshedslightoncellleveleventsduringectodermalorgandevelopment
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