REGULATION AND FUNCTION OF SF HGF DURING MIGRATION OF LIMB MUSCLE PRECURSOR CELLS IN CHICKEN/

Citation
S. Heymann et al., REGULATION AND FUNCTION OF SF HGF DURING MIGRATION OF LIMB MUSCLE PRECURSOR CELLS IN CHICKEN/, Developmental biology, 180(2), 1996, pp. 566-578
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Developmental Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00121606
Volume
180
Issue
2
Year of publication
1996
Pages
566 - 578
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-1606(1996)180:2<566:RAFOSH>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
Limb muscles of vertebrates are derived from migratory dermomyotomal c ells which emanate from a limited number of somites located adjacent t o the developing limb buds. We have generated additional limb buds in chicken embryos by implantation of FGF-beads into the interlimb region in order to analyze whether these somites can be programmed to supply ectopic limbs with myogenic precursor cells. We show that migrating m yogenic precursor cells are released from somites at the level of the newly formed limb, even when cell migration into the natural limb has been completed. The implantation of FGF beads in the lateral plate mes oderm rapidly induces SF/HGF expression. FGF beads implanted between H H stages 10 and 12 inhibit limb bud formation or shift the normal limb position. When an additional FGF bead was implanted at the original l imb position at HH stage 15, SF/HGF expression was transiently induced to low levels without inducing a new limb. This demonstrates that the initial induction of SF/HGF by FGF does not require limb formation. E xpression of SF/HGF during early limb bud stages was found in the enti re developing bud and the adjacent lateral plate mesoderm with direct contacts to the lateral edge of the dermomyotome. Later, the SF/HGF ex pression domain retracts to a distal region below the apical ectoderma l ridge. To investigate the role of SF/HGF in the migratory process, w e implanted beads soaked in SF/HGF-alone or together with FGF into dif ferent locations of the developing chick embryo. In the experiments SF /HGF caused delamination of migratory cells from the dermomyotomal epi thelium but no chemotactic attraction of migrating cells toward the SF /HGF source. (C) 1996 Academic Press, Inc.