Publication | Open Access
Two lineage boundaries coordinate vertebrate apical ectodermal ridge formation
349
Citations
53
References
2000
Year
The vertebrate limb bud’s proximal–distal outgrowth is regulated by the apical ectodermal ridge, which forms at a fixed dorsal–ventral position. The study investigates the genetic and cellular events regulating AER formation in mice. The authors used Cre/loxP fate‑mapping and a novel retroviral cell‑labeling technique to examine these events. They identified two lineage boundaries that delimit the AER, demonstrated that En1 expression controls AER positioning and maintenance, and showed that En1 signaling represses Wnt7a across the dorsal–ventral border.
Proximal–distal outgrowth of the vertebrate limb bud is regulated by the apical ectodermal ridge (AER), which forms at an invariant position along the dorsal–ventral (D/V) axis of the embryo. We have studied the genetic and cellular events that regulate AER formation in the mouse. In contrast to implications from previous studies in chick, we identified two distinct lineage boundaries in mouse ectoderm prior to limb bud outgrowth using a Cre/loxP-based fate-mapping approach and a novel retroviral cell-labeling technique. One border is transient and at the limit of expression of the ventral gene En1 , which corresponds to the D/V midline of the AER, and the second border corresponds to the dorsal AER margin. Labeling of AER precursors using an inducible Cre showed that not all cells that initially express AER genes form the AER, indicating that signaling is required to maintain an AER phenotype. Misexpression of En1 at moderate levels specifically in the dorsal AER of transgenic mice was found to produce dorsally shifted AER fragments, whereas high levels of En1 abolished AER formation. In both cases, the dorsal gene Wnt7a was repressed in cells adjacent to the En1 -expressing cells, demonstrating that signaling regulated by EN1 occurs across the D/V border. Finally, fate mapping of AER domains in these mutants showed that En1 plays a part in positioning and maintaining the two lineage borders.
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