Abstract
In amniotes, it is widely accepted that WNTs secreted by the dorsal neural tube form a concentration gradient that regulates early somite patterning and myotome organization. Here we demonstrate in the chicken embryo that WNT protein is not secreted to act at a distance, but rather loaded onto migrating neural crest cells that deliver it to somites. Inhibiting neural crest migration or ablating their population has a profound impact on the WNT response in somites. Furthermore, we show that a central player in the efficient delivery of WNT to somites is the heparan sulfate proteoglycan GPC4, expressed by neural crest. Together, our data describe a novel mode of signaling whereby WNT proteins hitch a ride on migratory neural crest cells to pattern the somites at a distance from its source. © 2014. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Serralbo, O., & Marcelle, C. (2014). Migrating cells mediate long-range WNT signaling. Development (Cambridge), 141(10), 2057–2063. https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.107656
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