AI Article Synopsis

  • During gastrulation, cells in an embryo turn into different layers that will form various body parts.
  • Researchers studied zebrafish to see how these special cells called neuromesodermal progenitors (NMps) divide and grow.
  • They found that NMps can form both spinal cord and muscle tissue but do this in different ways depending on the type of animal.

Article Abstract

During gastrulation, embryonic cells become specified into distinct germ layers. In mouse, this continues throughout somitogenesis from a population of bipotent stem cells called neuromesodermal progenitors (NMps). However, the degree of self-renewal associated with NMps in the fast-developing zebrafish embryo is unclear. Using a genetic clone-tracing method, we labelled early embryonic progenitors and found a strong clonal similarity between spinal cord and mesoderm tissues. We followed individual cell lineages using light-sheet imaging, revealing a common neuromesodermal lineage contribution to a subset of spinal cord tissue across the anterior-posterior body axis. An initial population subdivides at mid-gastrula stages and is directly allocated to neural and mesodermal compartments during gastrulation. A second population in the tailbud undergoes delayed allocation to contribute to the neural and mesodermal compartment only at late somitogenesis. Cell tracking and retrospective cell fate assignment at late somitogenesis stages reveal these cells to be a collection of mono-fated progenitors. Our results suggest that NMps are a conserved population of bipotential progenitors, the lineage of which varies in a species-specific manner due to vastly different rates of differentiation and growth.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6240315PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dev.166728DOI Listing

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