Segregation of brain and organizer precursors is differentially regulated by Nodal signaling at blastula stage.

Biol Open

Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina, Departamento de Biología Celular e Histología / 1° U.A. Departamento de Histología, Embriología, Biología Celular y Genética, Laboratorio de Embriología Molecular "Prof. Dr. Andrés E. Carrasco", Buenos Aires 1121, Argentina

Published: February 2021

The blastula Chordin- and Noggin-expressing (BCNE) center comprises animal-dorsal and marginal-dorsal cells of the amphibian blastula and contains the precursors of the brain and the gastrula organizer. Previous findings suggested that the BCNE behaves as a homogeneous cell population that only depends on nuclear β-catenin activity but does not require Nodal and later segregates into its descendants during gastrulation. In contrast to previous findings, in this work, we show that the BCNE does not behave as a homogeneous cell population in response to Nodal antagonists. In fact, we found that expression in a marginal subpopulation of notochordal precursors indeed requires Nodal input. We also establish that an animal BCNE subpopulation of cells that express both, and (a marker of pluripotent neuroectodermal cells), and gives rise to most of the brain, persisted at blastula stage after blocking Nodal. Therefore, Nodal signaling is required to define a population of cells and to restrict the recruitment of brain precursors within the BCNE as early as at blastula stage. We discuss our findings in in comparison to other vertebrate models, uncovering similitudes in early brain induction and delimitation through Nodal signaling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7928228PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.051797DOI Listing

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