Publication | Closed Access
Apical Abscission Alters Cell Polarity and Dismantles the Primary Cilium During Neurogenesis
187
Citations
22
References
2014
Year
Primary CiliumCytoskeletonCellular PhysiologyTissue DevelopmentEpendymaCell InteractionCell SignalingAdult Tissue HomeostasisMolecular PhysiologyCell PolarityCell DivisionMorphogenesisFinal AbscissionCell BiologyBiologyCell LineageDevelopmental BiologyApical AbscissionCellular StructureCell Fate DeterminationMedicineNeural Stem CellCell Development
Withdrawal of differentiating cells from proliferative tissue is critical for embryonic development and adult tissue homeostasis; however, the mechanisms that control this cell behavior are poorly understood. Using high-resolution live-cell imaging in chick neural tube, we uncover a form of cell subdivision that abscises apical cell membrane and mediates neuron detachment from the ventricle. This mechanism operates in chick and mouse, is dependent on actin-myosin contraction, and results in loss of apical cell polarity. Apical abscission also dismantles the primary cilium, known to transduce sonic-hedgehog signals, and is required for expression of cell-cycle-exit gene p27/Kip1. We further show that N-cadherin levels, regulated by neuronal-differentiation factor Neurog2, determine cilium disassembly and final abscission. This cell-biological mechanism may mediate such cell transitions in other epithelia in normal and cancerous conditions.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1