Neurodevelopment: Lineage-dependent spatial and functional organization of the mammalian enteric nervous system

Publication date

2017-05-19

Authors

Lasrado, Reena
Boesmans, Werend
Kleinjung, Jens
Pin, Carmen
Bell, Donald
Bhaw, Leena
McCallum, Sarah
Zong, Hui
Luo, Liqun
Clevers, HansISNI 0000000043961208

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Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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taverne

Abstract

The enteric nervous system(ENS) is essential for digestive function and gut homeostasis. Here we show that the amorphous neuroglia networks of the mouse ENS are composed of overlapping clonal units founded by postmigratory neural crest-derived progenitors.The spatial configuration of ENS clones depends on proliferation-driven local interactions of ENS progenitors with lineally unrelated neuroectodermal cells, the ordered colonization of the serosa-mucosa axis by clonal descendants, and gut expansion. Single-cell transcriptomics and mutagenesis analysis delineated dynamic molecular states of ENS progenitors and identified RETas a regulator of neurogenic commitment. Clonally related enteric neurons exhibit synchronous activity in response to network stimulation. Thus, lineage relationships underpin the organization of the peripheral nervous system.

Keywords

Taverne, General Medicine, General, Journal Article

Citation

Lasrado, R, Boesmans, W, Kleinjung, J, Pin, C, Bell, D, Bhaw, L, McCallum, S, Zong, H, Luo, L, Clevers, H, Vanden Berghe, P & Pachnis, V 2017, 'Neurodevelopment : Lineage-dependent spatial and functional organization of the mammalian enteric nervous system', Science, vol. 356, no. 6339, pp. 722-726. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aam7511