The dermomyotome ventrolateral lip is essential for the hypaxial myotome formation

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Pu, Q., Abduelmula, A., Masyuk, M., Theiss, C., Schwandulla, D., Hans, M., Patel, K., Brand-Saberi, B. and Huang, R. (2013) The dermomyotome ventrolateral lip is essential for the hypaxial myotome formation. BMC Developmental Biology, 13 (1). 37. ISSN 1471-213X doi: 10.1186/1471-213X-13-37

Abstract/Summary

Background The myotome is the primitive skeletal muscle that forms within the embryonic metameric body wall. It can be subdivided into an epaxial and hypaxial domain. It has been shown that the formation of the epaxial myotome requires the dorsomedial lip of the dermomyotome (DML). Although the ventrolateral lip (VLL) of the dermomyotome is believed to be required for the formation of the hypaxial myotome, experimentally evidence for this statement still needs to be provided. Provision of such data would enable the resolution of a debate regarding the formation of the hypaxial dermomyotome. Two mechanisms have been proposed for this tissue. The first proposes that the intermediate dermomyotome undergoes cellular expansion thereby pushing the ventral lateral lip in a lateral direction (translocation). In contrast, the alternative view holds that the ventral lateral lip grows laterally. Results Using time lapse confocal microscopy, we observed that the GFP-labelled ventrolateral lip (VLL) of the dermomyotome grows rather than translocates in a lateral direction. The necessity of the VLL for lateral extension of the myotome was addressed by ablation studies. We found that the hypaxial myotome did not form after VLL ablation. In contrast, the removal of an intermediate portion of the dermomyotome had very little effect of the hypaxial myotome. These results demonstrate that the VLL is required for the formation of the hypaxial myotome. Conclusion Our study demonstrates that the dermomyotome ventrolateral lip is essential for the hypaxial myotome formation and supports the lip extension model. Therefore, despite being under independent signalling controls, both the dorsomedial and ventrolateral lip fulfil the same function, i.e. they extend into adjacent regions permitting the growth of the myotome.

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Item Type Article
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/35941
Identification Number/DOI 10.1186/1471-213X-13-37
Refereed Yes
Divisions Life Sciences > School of Biological Sciences > Biomedical Sciences
Publisher BioMed Central
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