Mammalian neural crest cells participate in normal embryonic development on microinjection into post-implantation mouse embryos
- 1 November 1985
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 318 (6042), 181-183
- https://doi.org/10.1038/318181a0
Abstract
The production of chimaeric mice by aggregating pre-implantation mouse embryos or by injection of cells into the blastocyst has been of great value in analysing the regulation of early mammalian development and in dissecting the relationships of early cell lineages. While the totipotent cells of the pre-implantation embryo can be grown in vitro and thus are readily accessible to experimental manipulation, this is not possible after the embryo has implanted into the uterus. This problem has severely hampered the analysis of cell migration and of cell lineage relationships in later stages of mammalian development. In contrast, the chicken embryo can be manipulated experimentally throughout embryo-genesis and this has made the bird a favourable system for studying patterns of cell migration in the development of higher vertebrates. In mammals, the introduction of retroviruses and haematopoietic cells has provided two means of probing post-implantation development by direct intervention. I report here that cultured neural crest cells, when microinjected into 9-day-old mouse embryos, can migrate over considerable distances and participate in normal development, and the resulting chimaeric animals show pigmentation derived from the donor cells in hair and iris. The introduction of cells into post-implantation embryos may provide the means of studying patterns of cell migration in mammalian development at a level of sophistication which so far has been restricted to the chicken system.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mechanisms of cell migration in the vertebrate embryoCell Differentiation, 1984
- Introduction of a selectable gene into different animal tissue by a retrovirus recombinant vector.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1984
- Cell migrations in embryosCell, 1984
- Analysis of migratory behavior of neural crest and fibroblastic cells in embryonic tissuesDevelopmental Biology, 1980
- Retroviruses and embryogenesis: Microinjection of Moloney leukemia virus into midgestation mouse embryosCell, 1980
- Prevention of genetic anemias in mice by microinjection of normal hematopoietic stem cells into the fetal placentaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1979
- Migratory patterns of cloned neural crest melanocytes injected into host chicken embryos.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1979
- GENE CONTROL OF MAMMALIAN DIFFERENTIATIONAnnual Review of Genetics, 1974
- Fault Rupture in the Iranian (Dasht-e-bayāz) Earthquake of August 1968Nature, 1968
- Gene control of mammalian pigmentary differentiation. I. Clonal origin of melanocytes.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1967