Abstract

The tissue movements of epithelial spreading and mesenchymal contraction play key roles in many aspects of embryonic morphogenesis. One way of studying these movements in a controlled manner is to make all excisional skin wound to an embryo and watch the wound heal. In this paper we report our studies of healing of a simple excisional lesion made to the limb bud stage mouse embryo. The wounded, living embryo is cultured in a roller bottle; under such conditions the wound heals with a highly reproducible time course and is completely closed by 24 hr. During the healing period the environment bathing the wound can be simply manipulated by adding drugs or factors to the culture medium. We have used DiI to label mesenchymal cells exposed at the margin of the initial wound and, by following their fate and measuring the area of mesenchyme remaining exposed at various time points during the healing process, we have quantified both the extent of mesenchymal contraction and the extent of reepithelialisation by movement of epidermis over mesenchyme. We show that the two types of tissue movement contribute almost equally (50:50) to the total wound closure rate. We have gone on to investigate the cell machinery underlying these processes. In adult wounds the epidermis migrates by means of lamellipodial crawling, but we show that reepithelialisation in the embryo is achieved instead by purse-string contraction of a cable of filamentous actin which assembles in the basal layer of cells at the free edge of the epidermis. Addition of cytochalasin D to the culture medium blocks formation of this actin cable end leads to failure of reepithelialisation. Contraction of adult wound connective tissue appears to be driven by conversion of dermal fibroblasts into a specialist smooth muscle-like fibroblast, the myofibroblast. However, using an antibody recognising the αisoform of smooth muscle actin and specific for smooth muscle cells and myofibroblasts, we show that a similar conversion into myofibroblasts does not occur at any stage during the embryonic wound healing process. These observations indicate that both of the tissue movements of embryonic wound healing utilise cell machinery fundamentally different from that driving the analogous tissue movements of adult healing.

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