Vascular Mural Cells Promote Noradrenergic Differentiation of Embryonic Sympathetic Neurons

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Abstract

The sympathetic nervous system controls smooth muscle tone and heart rate in the cardiovascular system. Postganglionic sympathetic neurons (SNs) develop in close proximity to the dorsal aorta (DA) and innervate visceral smooth muscle targets. Here, we use the zebrafish embryo to ask whether the DA is required for SN development. We show that noradrenergic (NA) differentiation of SN precursors temporally coincides with vascular mural cell (VMC) recruitment to the DA and vascular maturation. Blocking vascular maturation inhibits VMC recruitment and blocks NA differentiation of SN precursors. Inhibition of platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) signaling prevents VMC differentiation and also blocks NA differentiation of SN precursors. NA differentiation is normal in cloche mutants that are devoid of endothelial cells but have VMCs. Thus, PDGFR-mediated mural cell recruitment mediates neurovascular interactions between the aorta and sympathetic precursors and promotes their noradrenergic differentiation. Fortuna et al. show that neurovascular interactions between the aorta and sympathetic precursors are mediated by PDGFR-driven mural cell recruitment that promotes noradrenergic differentiation.

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Fortuna, V., Pardanaud, L., Brunet, I., Ola, R., Ristori, E., Santoro, M. M., … Eichmann, A. (2015). Vascular Mural Cells Promote Noradrenergic Differentiation of Embryonic Sympathetic Neurons. Cell Reports, 11(11), 1786–1796. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.05.028

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