Abstract
We investigated the contributions of a recently described population of neural tube cells, which participates in the development of a variety of tissues, to the development of the heart and great vessels. These cells, termed as the ventrally emigrating neural tube (VENT) cells, originate in the ventral part of the hindbrain neural tube, emigrate at the site of attachment of the cranial nerves, and populate their respective target tissues. VENT cells of the caudal hindbrain neural tube at the level of the vagus nerve, which were previously reported to migrate into the heart, were tagged with replication-deficient retroviruses containing the LacZ gene in chick embryos, after the emigration of neural crest from this region. In older embryos, VENT cells were detected in a variety of locations including the ventricles, atria, their septa, aorticopulmonary septum, and great vessels of the heart. Immunostaining with a specific marker revealed that VENT cells differentiated into smooth muscle cells of great vessels. Differentiation of VENT cells into cardiac muscle cells was reported previously. Extirpation of the VENT cells prior to their departure from the neural tube resulted in some common cardiovascular malformations: thin-walled ventricles and atria, ventricular and atrial septal defects, persistent truncus arteriosus, and stenosis of the great vessels. These results suggest that a novel population of neural tube cells also contributes to the normal development of the heart and great vessels. Thus, the heart and great vessels develop from three sources of cells: mesoderm, neural crest, and VENT cells.
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