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Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology Cell-Cell Communication in Development Gilbert 9e – Chapter 3

Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

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Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology. Cell-Cell Communication in Development Gilbert 9e – Chapter 3. It has to be EXTREMELY well coordinated for the single-celled fertilized ovum to develop into the complex adult - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Bio 127 - Section IIntroduction to Developmental Biology

Cell-Cell Communication in DevelopmentGilbert 9e – Chapter 3

Page 2: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• It has to be EXTREMELY well coordinated for the single-celled fertilized ovum to develop into the complex adult

• This coordination requires a systematic way for the cells to know what’s happening around them so that they can change their gene expression correctly

• They must also then change the signals they are sending out to let surrounding cells know what changes they are making

Page 3: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Developmental Activities Coordinated in this Way

1. The formation of tissues from a mix of individual cells

2. The formation of organs from a mix of tissue types

3. The formation of cells, tissues and organs in specific locations

4. The growth and death of cells, tissues and organs

5. The achievement of polarity in cells, tissue and organs

Page 4: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• The plasma membranes of cells are designed to sense what is happening in their environment

• Membrane molecules sense:– other cell membranes– soluble signals sent by other cells– the type of extracellular matrix that surrounds them

• A few signals can get past the plasma membrane

Page 5: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Most cells in the embryo have molecules on their surface that identify who they are

These molecules also instruct themwho they should be in contact with

Page 6: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Sorting out and reconstruction of spatial relationships in aggregates of embryonic amphibian cells

Allcelltypes can do it

Page 7: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Aggregates formed by mixing 7-day chick embryo neural retina cells with pigmented retina cells

....just to showthat it’s morethan an artist’srendition....

Page 8: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.4 Hierarchy of cell sorting in order of decreasing surface tensions

The moreadhesive the cell’s plasma membrane is,the more it migrates to the middle ofa cell mixture.

Page 9: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

The molecular biology of cell adhesion: Cadherins

The calcium-dependentadhesion molecules(or cadherins) are the main source of adhesiveactivity on the cell surface

The more you express,the more central youbecome in a mixture

Page 10: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

--- A nearly perfect linear relationship

Importance of amount of cadherin for morphogenesis

Page 11: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Early embryo cells all express E-cadherin

Presumptive neural tube cells lose E-cadherin and gain N-cadherin.

N-cadherin expression does something very similar in limb cartilage.

Importance of type of cadherin for morphogenesis

Page 12: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Cadherins can activate migration through actin

Cadherin binding outside of the cell can cause actin-basedmigration in some cells

Page 13: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Disruption of N-Cadherin in Frog Embryos

failed migration failed actin assembly

normalblocked

Page 14: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

The cadherins activate migration through Rho GTPase

Migratory cells have Rhoin their cadherin-actinapparatus – cadherinactivates Rho, Rho activatesactin-myosin migration.

Page 15: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Drosophila gastrulation

The cells that have Rho activatedmigrate to become the mesoderm.

Page 16: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Rho build-up on E-cad causes actin polymerization and migration

Migration is started by expression of Twist and Snailwhich causes Rho and B-catenin to translocate in cells

Page 17: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Tracheal Development in Drosophila

Rho can also be linked to cellsurface receptors and causechemotactic migration.

The cadherin attachmentsremain strong and the cellsmigrate as a cohesive unit.

Page 18: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.12 Cell migration

- not always cadherin-dependent however!

Mesenchymal Cell Migration is also Rho-Dependent

Page 19: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

One-Way, Two-Way and Reciprocal Communications Strategies

Ligands

Receptors

2nd Messengers

Target Mechanisms

Page 20: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Cell Signaling Terminology

• Paracrine • Endocrine • Synaptic • Induction • Inducer • Responder • Signal Competence • Signal Transduction • Permissive Signals• Instructive Signals

Page 21: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Ectodermal competence and the ability to respond to the optic vesicle inducer in Xenopus

Page 22: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• Optic vesicle secretes......– BMP 4– Fgf 8

• Head ectoderm expresses......– Sox 2– L-Maf– Pax 6

• Lens genes turned on......– crystallin– others

HOW?

Page 23: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Induced Differentiation

Page 24: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Induction Cascades

• We know that tissues tend to aggregate through cell contact

• It’s common for tissues to play off each other to produce an organ

• Anything from two tissues signaling back and forth to many tissues coordinating each other’s actions

• The common theme is that a change in gene expression internally (TF’s, functional proteins) is often accompanied by a change in secreted proteins (paracrine, endocrine factors)

Page 25: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Eye formation is a classically studied cascade of induction

Simple lens induction...

Page 26: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Reciprocal induction

Page 27: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology
Page 28: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology
Page 29: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

The reciprocal interaction between an epithelium and a closely associated mesenchyme is a very common means of organ development (organogenesis)

Page 30: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

These arebackwards

Page 31: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Different mesenchyme induces different epithelial structures

Page 32: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Also, different epithelium can only become what they are competent to become

Page 33: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

A little about some of the actual molecules.....

• Growth Factors carry most of the signals– Hormones and neurotransmitters later on– 4 big families:

• FGF, Hedgehog, Wnt, TGF-b

• Receptors and signaling cascades premade for them make you competent

Page 34: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family are classic growth factors: FGF 1-8– lots of others: VEGF, HGF, PDGF, etc.– can change transcription of genes 2 ways

• RTK Pathway: receptor tyrosine kinase• JAK-STAT: JAK activates STAT TF’s

Page 35: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• Optic vesicle secretes......– BMP 4– Fgf 8

• Head ectoderm expresses......– Sox 2– L-Maf– Pax 6

• Lens genes turned on......– crystallin– others

Page 36: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.20 Fgf8 in the developing chick (Part 1)

Page 37: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.20 Fgf8 in the developing chick (Part 2)

L-Maf expression in ectodermFGF8 in optic vesicle

Page 38: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.24 A mutation in the gene for FgfR3 causes the premature constitutive activation of the STAT pathway and

the production of phosphorylated Stat1 protein

Page 39: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• Hedgehog family includes sonic (shh), desert (dhh) and indian (ihh) in vertebrates

• Change transcription through an interesting series of inhibitory activities– the patched receptor inhibits the smoothened

protein until hedgehog binds– smoothened then moves to inhibit proteins that

inhibit the Gli activator protein

Page 40: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Both shh and patched proteins require cholesterol.Blocking its production can cause cyclopism.

Figure 3.26 (A) Sonic hedgehog expression is shown by in situ hybridization in the nervous system, gut, and limb bud of a

chick embryo. (B) Head of a cyclopic lamb

Page 41: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• Wnt family has 15 members in vertebrates– Glycoproteins with lipid tails!– Work through frizzled receptors and disheveled

activators (fly guys!)– Also activate by inhibition of an inhibitor

Page 42: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• Interestingly, Wnt can do much of what cadherins can do

– Send catenins to the nucleus

– Activate rho and change the cytoskeleton

– This is called “crosstalk” and it is very important in cell signaling

Page 43: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Remember the structure of the cadherin system

• Implantation of the mammalian embryo in adhere to the uterine wall– E- and P-cadherin– Integrin and uterine ECM– Proteins that bind sugars on uterine wall Rho proteins

associate withcatenins andactin system.

They can changeactin’s structure.

Page 44: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• The TGF-b superfamily is a very large family of very active peptide growth factors– involved in the development of most tissues

• The receptors are also a large family of proteins– They are serine-threonine kinases, not RTK

• They work through the activation of SMAD transcription factors

Page 45: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.29 Relationships among members of the TGF-β superfamily

We’ll hear a lotof these namesagain this semester!

Page 46: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• Remember:

– The Big 4 are just part of the story

– We’ll talk about others as they come into play

Page 47: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

The Delta-Notch family: “Juxtacrine” signals

– Transmembrane proteins on cells in contact– Delta, Jagged or Serrate bind to Notch family– Signals go both ways

– The Notch signal is interesting in that it’s internal domain is cleaved and enters nucleus

– This activates a dormant transcription factor

Page 48: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.33 Mechanism of Notch activity

Page 49: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Apoptosis: genetically programmed cell death

• Absolutely essential to control cell numbers, cell quality and to create space

– The space between our fingers– 2/3 of all neurons we make– The middle ear– The cerebral ventricles– Frog tails– Male mammary epithelium

Page 50: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.32 Disruption of normal brain development by blocking apoptosis

Page 51: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Apoptosis

• Often cells are set to apoptose by default

• They require a signal to keep them alive

• The signal can be soluble or can be attachment, such as cadherins, integrins

• These are guarantees that cells remain where they should be in the body

Page 52: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.31 Apoptosis pathways in nematodes and mammals

Early workdone mostlyin worms

Mammalianhomologs

A signal thatturns on CED-9(Bcl2) saves thecell from death

Page 53: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

A. Maintaining the differentiated state

B. The extracellular matrix as a source of developmental signals

C. Epithelial-mesenchymal transition

Other Related Strategies of Developmental Biology

Page 54: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

• Just changing gene expression is not enough

• Maintaining the new expression pattern is essential for differentiation

• So far, four ways to do this have been described

Maintaining the Differentiated State

Page 55: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Four ways of maintaining differentiation after the initial signal has been given (Part 1)

TF Positive feedback loop Trithorax opens promoter

Page 56: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Four ways of maintaining differentiation after the initial signal has been given (Part 2)

Autocrine loop Paracrine loop

Page 57: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

The Role of the Extracellular Matrix (ECM)

• As development proceeds, all cells secrete sugars and proteins to create solid substrate between the cells

• Nearly all cells require adhesion to survive

• Cell migration is also dependent on ECM

Page 58: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.37 Extracellular matrices in the developing embryo

A fibronectin tract allows mesoderm migration during gastrulation

The epithelial cells secretefibronectin into basal laminaand then can use it migrate upon.

Page 59: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.38 Simplified diagram of the fibronectin receptor complex

Integrins bind the ECM to the cytoskeleton

Page 60: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.40 Basement membrane-directed gene expression in mammary gland tissue

Plated on plastic(A)

Plated onbasal lamina(B,C,D)

Page 61: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Epithelial to Mesenchymal Transition

• A key type of differentiation in many tissue forming activities in embryos and adults– formation of mesoderm from epiblast– formation of neural crest cells from neural tube– formation of coronary arteries from epicardium– formation of vertebrae from somites– wound healing in skin and vasculature– metastasis of epithelial cancers

Page 62: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.41 Epithelial-mesenchymal transition, or EMT (Part 1)

If not accompanied by differentiation,loss of connectionswould lead to death

Page 63: Bio 127 - Section I Introduction to Developmental Biology

Figure 3.41 Epithelial-mesenchymal transition, or EMT (Part 2)