Mesenchyme-dependent BMP signaling directs the timing of mandibular osteogenesis

被引:52
作者
Merrill, Amy E. [1 ]
Eames, B. Frank [1 ]
Weston, Scott J. [1 ]
Heath, Thayer [1 ]
Schneider, Richard A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Orthopaed Surg, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
来源
DEVELOPMENT | 2008年 / 135卷 / 07期
关键词
epithelial-mesenchymal interactions; BMP signaling; mandibular primordia; neural crest; intramembranous ossification; quail-duck chimeras; evolutionary developmental biology;
D O I
10.1242/dev.015933
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
To identify molecular and cellular mechanisms that determine when bone forms, and to elucidate the role played by osteogenic mesenchyme, we employed an avian chimeric system that draws upon the divergent embryonic maturation rates of quail and duck. Pre-migratory neural crest mesenchyme destined to form bone in the mandible was transplanted from quail to duck. In resulting chimeras, quail donor mesenchyme established significantly faster molecular and histological programs for osteogenesis within the relatively slower-progressing duck host environment. To understand this phenotype, we assayed for changes in the timing of epithelial-mesenchymal interactions required for bone formation and found that such interactions were accelerated in chimeras. In situ hybridization analyses uncovered donor-dependent changes in the spatiotemporal expression of genes, including the osteoinductive growth factor Bmp4. Mesenchymal expression of Bmp4 correlated with an ability of quail donor cells to form bone precociously without duck host epithelium, and also relied upon epithelial interactions until mesenchyme could form bone independently. Treating control mandibles with exogenous BMP4 recapitulated the capacity of chimeras to express molecular mediators of osteogenesis prematurely and led to the early differentiation of bone. Inhibiting BMP signaling delayed bone formation in a stage-dependent manner that was accelerated in chimeras. Thus, mandibular mesenchyme dictates when bone forms by temporally regulating its interactions with epithelium and its own expression of Bmp4. Our findings offer a developmental mechanism to explain how neural crest-derived mesenchyme and BMP signaling underlie the evolution of species-specific skeletal morphology.
引用
收藏
页码:1223 / 1234
页数:12
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