Probing the origin of matching functional jaws: roles of Dlx5/6 in cranial neural crest cells

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Abstract

Gnathostome jaws derive from the first pharyngeal arch (PA1), a complex structure constituted by Neural Crest Cells (NCCs), mesodermal, ectodermal and endodermal cells. Here, to determine the regionalized morphogenetic impact of Dlx5/6 expression, we specifically target their inactivation or overexpression to NCCs. NCC-specific Dlx5/6 inactivation (NCC∆Dlx5/6) generates severely hypomorphic lower jaws that present typical maxillary traits. Therefore, differently from Dlx5/6 null-embryos, the upper and the lower jaws of NCC∆Dlx5/6 mice present a different size. Reciprocally, forced Dlx5 expression in maxillary NCCs provokes the appearance of distinct mandibular characters in the upper jaw. We conclude that: (1) Dlx5/6 activation in NCCs invariably determines lower jaw identity; (2) the morphogenetic processes that generate functional matching jaws depend on the harmonization of Dlx5/6 expression in NCCs and in distinct ectodermal territories. The co-evolution of synergistic opposing jaws requires the coordination of distinct regulatory pathways involving the same transcription factors in distant embryonic territories.

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Shimizu, M., Narboux-Nême, N., Gitton, Y., de Lombares, C., Fontaine, A., Alfama, G., … Levi, G. (2018). Probing the origin of matching functional jaws: roles of Dlx5/6 in cranial neural crest cells. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-33207-2

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