Nerve growth factor regulates axial rotation during early stages of chick embryo development
0301 basic medicine
0303 health sciences
Rotation
Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental
neurotrophin; rotatin; csk
Chick Embryo
neurotrophins; rotatin; csk; furin; proNGF
Antibodies, Neutralizing
Immunohistochemistry
03 medical and health sciences
Somites
Neutralization Tests
Nerve Growth Factor
Animals
Receptor, trkA
Body Patterning
Cell Proliferation
Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.1121138109
Publication Date:
2012-01-27T01:45:38Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
Nerve growth factor (NGF) was discovered because of its neurotrophic actions on sympathetic and sensory neurons in the developing chicken embryo. NGF was subsequently found to influence and regulate the function of many neuronal and non neuronal cells in adult organisms. Little is known, however, about the possible actions of NGF during early embryonic stages. However, mRNAs encoding for NGF and its receptors TrkA and p75
NTR
are expressed at very early stages of avian embryo development, before the nervous system is formed. The question, therefore, arises as to what might be the functions of NGF in early chicken embryo development, before its well-established actions on the developing sympathetic and sensory neurons. To investigate possible roles of NGF in the earliest stages of development, stage HH 11–12 chicken embryos were injected with an anti-NGF antibody (mAb αD11) that binds mature NGF with high affinity. Treatment with anti-NGF, but not with a control antibody, led to a dose-dependent inversion of the direction of axial rotation. This effect of altered rotation after anti NGF injection was associated with an increased cell death in somites. Concurrently, a microarray mRNA expression analysis revealed that NGF neutralization affects the expression of genes linked to the regulation of development or cell proliferation. These results reveal a role for NGF in early chicken embryo development and, in particular, in the regulation of somite survival and axial rotation, a crucial developmental process linked to left–right asymmetry specification.
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