Title: Lecture IV' Mechanisms of Neural Development
1Lecture IV. Mechanisms of Neural Development
- Bio 3411
- Wednesday
- September 2, 2009
2- T. Woolsey
- 3802 North Building
- 362-3601
- woolseyt_at_medicine.wustl.edu
3Readings
- NEUROSCIENCE 4th ed, pp 545-575 (sorta)
- References
- Fainsod, A., Steinbeisser, H., De Robertis, E.
M. (1994). EMBO J, 13(21), 5015-5025. - Hemmati-Brivanlou, A., Melton, D. (1997). Annu
Rev Neurosci, 20, 43-60. - Melton, D. A. (1987). Nature, 328(6125), 80-82.
- Sasai, Y., De Robertis, E. M. (1997). Dev Biol,
182(1), 5-20. - Smith, W. C., Harland, R. M. (1992). Cell,
70(5), 829-840. - Weeks, D. L., Melton, D. A. (1987). Proc Natl
Acad Sci U S A, 84(9), 2798-2802. - Wilson, P. A., Hemmati-Brivanlou, A. (1995).
Nature, 376(6538), 331-333. - Xanthos, J. B., Kofron, M., Wylie, C., Heasman,
J. (2001). Development, 128(2), 167-180. - Zimmerman, L. B., De Jesus-Escobar, J. M.,
Harland, R. M. (1996). Cell, 86(4), 599-606. - ______________________
- (pdfs on course website http//artsci.wustl.edu
/sdanker/index.html)
4Embryogenesis 1. Maternal cytoplasmic
determinants. 2. Fertilization creates
dorsal-ventral axis. 3. Cell division. 4.
Blastula created. 6. Ectoderm, mesoderm,
endoderm created. by molecular signals along
the Animal/Vegetal axis. 5. Gastulation. 6.
Spemann organizer creates anterior-posterior
axis. 7. Notocord induces the Neural Plate. 8.
Neurulation forms the Neural Tube. 9. Neural
crest cells form the PNS. 10. Segmentation
Cephalization (anterior enlargement)
5- Cell Signaling
- Discovery of the Organizer
- How Could this Work?
- 4) The Answer
- 5) Blockers
- 6) Current View
- 7) Summary
6 7Neuroinduction
Diffusible morphogen
8Intracellular Signaling through a Kinase
Cascade Signal Amplification (Suppression) and
Multiple Control Points
Ligand
Receptor
Kinase Cascade
Effector Proteins (transcription factors, ion
channels, cytoskeletal proteins, enzymes, etc)
Scaffolding Proteins bind multiple signaling
molecules to organize specific signaling pathways
9Endoderm and Mesoderm involute with
gastrulation Induction of the Neural Plate from
Neuroectoderm, by the underlying, closely apposed
Mesoderm.
10- Discovery of the Organizer
11Hilde Mangold and Hans Spemann
- Key experiments performed in 1921-1923 at the
University of Freiburg, Germany. - Hilde Mangold was a 24 year old graduate student
when she performed these
experiments. She died tragically in an
accidental alcohol heater explosion. - Hans Spemann was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1935.
12Mangold Spemann Experiments (1924)
13 14Explant Experiments with Animal Caps from
Amphibian Blastula Puzzling Results
15Isolating Inducing Factors that Promote Neuronal
Differentiation Sigma Catalog Experiments
Result in Further Confusion
(Many positives, including apparently
non-biological factors!)
16Models for Neural Induction
Epidermal factor
Neuronal factor
(default)
Neuronal factor
Epidermal factor
(default)
17TGF-b Proteins Signal Through Heterodimeric Recep
tors and Smad Transcription Factors
18 19A Dominant-Negative Receptor Subunit Blocks
Activation of the Signaling Pathway
(Hemmati-Brivanlou and Melton, 1992)
20Blocking TGF-b Signaling by a Dominant-Negative
Receptor Causes Isolated Neuroectoderm to Become
Neuronal
TGF-b Signaling
21BMP-4 (TGF-b) Signaling Results in Neural
Epidermal Induction
TGF-b Transforming Growth Factor - b
BMP-4 Bone Morphogenic Protein - 4
22Models for Neural Induction
BMP-4
23BMP-4 (Secreted by Neuroectodermal Cells)
Inhibits Neuronal Fate and Promotes Epidermal
Fate. Tissue Dissociation dilutes BMP-4 activity
(Wilson and Hemmati-Brivanlou, 1995)
(Endogenous BMP-4 Diluted)
24Recombinant BMP-4 Promotes Epidermal Fate and
Inhibits Neuronal Fate
Intact caps
Dispersed caps
Keratin (epidermal marker)
NCAM (neuronal marker)
(Wilson and Hemmati-Brivanlou, 1995)
25BMP-4 mRNA is Expressed in Presumptive Ectoderm
26 27Are there native anatgonists of BMP-4? Secreted
from underlying mesoderm? Yes chordin / noggin
/ follistatin. And they are enriched in the
Spemann-Mangold Organizer!
28(No Transcript)
29Differential Substractive Screen yields Chordin,
a BMP-4 antagonist (1994)
Generate cDNA library from oocytes
Probe cDNA library with differential probes
30Functional Expression Cloning yields noggin, a
BMP-4 anatagonist (1992)
(Smith and Harland, 1992)
31Chordin/Noggin/Follistatin directly bind to and
inactivate BMP-4
(Stays in loading well)
(Migrates into gel)
32Structure of Noggin-BMP complex
noggin
Binding Sites
(Groppe, et al., 2002)
Receptor (Type-II)
Receptor (Type-I)
BMP-7
33Molecular Mechanism of Neuralization
34 35TGF-b proteins signal through heterodimeric recep
tors and Smad transcription factors
Multi-step pathway (kinases, scaffolding
proteins)
36Neural induction mechanisms are conserved
37BMP-4 is only one member of the large
evolutionarily conserved TGF-b gene family, which
mediates many different tissue inductive events.
Relationships between members of the TGF-b super
family. (After Hogan, 1996)
38 39Neurogenesis Inductive Mechanisms
1. Neuroectodermal cells choose either a neuronal
or epidermal fate. 2. Interactions between
mesoderm and neuroectoderm induce neuroectoderm
to adopt the neural fate. 3. Induction is
signaled by Bone Morphogenic Protein-4 (BMP-4),
a protein made and secreted by neuroectodermal
cells. 4. BMP-4 inhibits neuralization and
promotes the epidermal fate in neighboring
cells. 5. Mesodermal cells secrete proteins
(Chordin, Noggin, Follistatin) which directly
bind and antagonizes BMP-4 activity.
40Neurogenesis Inductive Mechanisms
6. Neuroectodermal cells become neurons by
suppression of BMP-4 activity by secreted
antagonists from underlying mesodermal cells. 7.
The default state of neuroectodermal cells is
neuronal. 8. This mechanism is conserved between
vertebrates and invertebrates. 9. BMP-4 is a
member of the Transforming Growth Factor (TGF-b)
family of signaling molecules. 10. Similar
signaling events in the nervous system mediate
changes in later development stages and in adult
plasticity.
41END