Abstract

The heart consists of cells deriving from the cardiogenic plate and also from extracardiac sources. One of the major extracardiac contributions is given by the neural crest. The differentiation pathway and fate of the neural crest cells in the outflow tract have been followed over a prolonged period during outflow tract septation. We studied the role of the neural crest in remodeling the outflow tract by long-term cell tracing, differentiation markers and apoptosis. The pattern of neural crest cells migrating to the heart was investigated by heterospecific chicken quail chimeras and by retroviral infection of the reporter gene LacZ to the stem cells. The tagged neural crest cells move to areas that are morphogenetically active, such as the outflow tract, the semilunar valves, the wall of the arteries and the cardiac ganglia. Two differentiated subpopulations are discerned on the basis of immunohistochemical characterization with antibodies against smooth muscle cells in the arterial vessel wall and against ganglionic cells that were scattered around the vessels of the arterial pole and the heart. A third subpopulation did not stain with these antibodies, but presented locally with the phenomenon of apoptosis as shown with the TUNEL approach. In a developmental series of chicken embryos the populations were followed until stage 40. It was evident that the outflow tract septum in the early phase of development consisted mainly of mesenchymal neural crest cells. In a later phase neural crest cells were still detected at semilunar valve level, but nearly absent in the outflow tract septum below valve level. The septum at that time had become myocardialized. It is evident that neural crest cells are actually removed from this part of the heart by apoptosis. We are pursuing the hypothesis that an important function of apoptotic cells in heart development might be to activate the cardiomyocytes to muscularize the outflow tract septum through mobilizing or delivering growth factors at the time and place that septum formation is initiated.

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