Burns A J, Champeval D, Le Douarin N M
Institut d'Embryologie Cellulaire et Moleculaire, College de France et CNRS, Nogent-sur-Marne, 94736, France.
Dev Biol. 2000 Mar 1;219(1):30-43. doi: 10.1006/dbio.1999.9592.
The vagal neural crest is the origin of majority of neurons and glia that constitute the enteric nervous system, the intrinsic innervation of the gut. We have recently confirmed that a second region of the neuraxis, the sacral neural crest, also contributes to the enteric neuronal and glial populations of both the myenteric and the submucosal plexuses in the chick, caudal to the level of the umbilicus. Results from this previous study showed that sacral neural crest-derived precursors colonised the gut in significant numbers only 4 days after vagal-derived cells had completed their migration along the entire length of the gut. This observation suggested that in order to migrate into the hindgut and differentiate into enteric neurons and glia, sacral neural crest cells may require an interaction with vagal-derived cells or with factors or signalling molecules released by them or their progeny. This interdependence may also explain the inability of sacral neural crest cells to compensate for the lack of ganglia in the terminal hindgut of Hirschsprung's disease in humans or aganglionic megacolon in animals. To investigate the possible interrelationship between sacral and vagal-derived neural crest cells within the hindgut, we mapped the contribution of various vagal neural crest regions to the gut and then ablated appropriate sections of chick vagal neural crest to interrupt the migration of enteric nervous system precursor cells and thus create an aganglionic hindgut model in vivo. In these same ablated animals, the sacral level neural axis was removed and replaced with the equivalent tissue from quail embryos, thus enabling us to document, using cell-specific antibodies, the migration and differentiation of sacral crest-derived cells. Results showed that the vagal neural crest contributed precursors to the enteric nervous system in a regionalised manner. When quail-chick grafts of the neural tube adjacent to somites 1-2 were performed, neural crest cells were found in enteric ganglia throughout the preumbilical gut. These cells were most numerous in the esophagus, sparse in the preumbilical intestine, and absent in the postumbilical gut. When similar grafts adjacent to somites 3-5 or 3-6 were carried out, crest cells were found within enteric ganglia along the entire gut, from the proximal esophagus to the distal colon. Vagal neural crest grafts adjacent to somites 6-7 showed that crest cells from this region were distributed along a caudal-rostral gradient, being most numerous in the hindgut, less so in the intestine, and absent in the proximal foregut. In order to generate aneural hindgut in vivo, it was necessary to ablate the vagal neural crest adjacent to somites 3-6, prior to the 13-somite stage of development. When such ablations were performed, the hindgut, and in some cases also the cecal region, lacked enteric ganglionated plexuses. Sacral neural crest grafting in these vagal neural crest ablated chicks showed that sacral cells migrated along normal, previously described hindgut pathways and formed isolated ganglia containing neurons and glia at the levels of the presumptive myenteric and submucosal plexuses. Comparison between vagal neural crest-ablated and nonablated control animals demonstrated that sacral-derived cells migrated into the gut and differentiated into neurons in higher numbers in the ablated animals than in controls. However, the increase in numbers of sacral neural crest-derived neurons within the hindgut did not appear to be sufficiently high to compensate for the lack of vagal-derived enteric plexuses, as ganglia containing sacral neural crest-derived neurons and glia were small and infrequent. Our findings suggest that the neuronal fate of a relatively fixed subpopulation of sacral neural crest cells may be predetermined as these cells neither require the presence of vagal-derived enteric precursors in order to colonise the hindgut, nor are capable of dramatically altering their proliferation or d
迷走神经嵴是构成肠神经系统(肠道的内在神经支配)的大多数神经元和神经胶质细胞的起源。我们最近证实,神经轴的另一个区域——骶神经嵴,也对鸡胚脐水平以下的肌间神经丛和黏膜下神经丛的肠神经元和神经胶质细胞群有贡献。此前这项研究的结果表明,只有在迷走神经嵴来源的细胞完成沿肠道全长的迁移4天后,骶神经嵴来源的前体细胞才大量定植于肠道。这一观察结果表明,为了迁移到后肠并分化为肠神经元和神经胶质细胞,骶神经嵴细胞可能需要与迷走神经嵴来源的细胞相互作用,或者与它们或其后代释放的因子或信号分子相互作用。这种相互依存关系也可能解释了骶神经嵴细胞无法补偿人类先天性巨结肠症终末后肠或动物无神经节巨结肠症中神经节缺乏的原因。为了研究后肠内骶神经嵴和迷走神经嵴来源的神经嵴细胞之间可能的相互关系,我们绘制了不同迷走神经嵴区域对肠道的贡献图,然后切除鸡胚迷走神经嵴的适当部分,以中断肠神经系统前体细胞的迁移,从而在体内创建一个无神经节的后肠模型。在这些同样被切除的动物中,去除骶水平的神经轴并用鹌鹑胚胎的等效组织替代,从而使我们能够使用细胞特异性抗体记录骶神经嵴来源细胞的迁移和分化。结果表明,迷走神经嵴以区域化的方式为肠神经系统贡献前体细胞。当进行与第1 - 2体节相邻的神经管的鹌鹑 - 鸡胚移植时,在脐前肠道的整个肠神经节中都发现了神经嵴细胞。这些细胞在食管中最多,在脐前肠中稀疏,在脐后肠中不存在。当进行与第3 - 5或第3 - 6体节相邻的类似移植时,在从食管近端到结肠远端的整个肠道的肠神经节中都发现了嵴细胞。与第6 - 7体节相邻的迷走神经嵴移植表明,来自该区域的嵴细胞沿尾 - 头梯度分布,在后肠中最多,在肠中较少,在前肠近端不存在。为了在体内产生无神经的后肠,有必要在发育的13体节阶段之前切除与第3 - 6体节相邻的迷走神经嵴。当进行这种切除时,后肠以及在某些情况下盲肠区域缺乏肠神经节丛。在这些迷走神经嵴被切除的鸡胚中进行骶神经嵴移植表明,骶神经嵴细胞沿着正常的、先前描述的后肠途径迁移,并在假定的肌间神经丛和黏膜下神经丛水平形成含有神经元和神经胶质细胞的孤立神经节。迷走神经嵴切除的动物与未切除的对照动物之间的比较表明,与对照相比,骶神经嵴来源的细胞在切除的动物中迁移到肠道并分化为神经元的数量更多。然而,后肠内骶神经嵴来源的神经元数量的增加似乎不足以补偿迷走神经嵴来源的肠神经丛的缺乏,因为含有骶神经嵴来源的神经元和神经胶质细胞的神经节小且稀少。我们的研究结果表明,骶神经嵴细胞中一个相对固定的亚群的神经元命运可能是预先确定的,因为这些细胞既不需要迷走神经嵴来源的肠前体细胞的存在来定植后肠,也不能显著改变它们的增殖或……