Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, 401 Barker Hall, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: harland{at}socrates.berkeley.edu)
Accepted April 16, 2001
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Dishevelled, Wnt, Convergent extension, Neural tube defects, Xenopus
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INTRODUCTION |
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Curiously, when posterior neural tissue is cultured in isolation, with no apposed mesoderm, neural cells will intercalate using bipolar, mediolaterally oriented lamellipodia (Fig. 1D; Elul et al., 1997). It has been suggested that this bipolar mode of intercalation represents a latent control mechanism in the neural plate (Keller et al., 2000), raising the possibility that a common mechanism underlies both neural and mesodermal convergent extension, but that additional levels of regulation in the two germ layers account for the differences in cell behaviors.
Little is known about the molecular control of convergent extension in any tissue, but members of the Wnt signal transduction network have been implicated in controlling this process in the Xenopus dorsal mesoderm. Indeed, Wnt11, Wnt5a, Frizzled-8 (Xfz-8), Frizzled-7 (Xfz-7), Naked Cuticle and Dishevelled (Xdsh) have each been shown to modulate convergent extension in dorsal mesoderm (Deardorff et al., 1998; Medina et al., 2000; Moon et al., 1993; Sokol, 1996; Tada and Smith, 2000; Yan et al., 2001). A variety of studies have indicated that these Wnt signaling components control convergent extension in Xenopus mesoderm via non-canonical Wnt pathways. For example, experiments using deletions of Xdsh that selectively affect the canonical or non-canonical Wnt pathways indicate that control of convergent extension occurs via a vertebrate cognate of the Drosophila planar cell polarity cascade (Tada and Smith, 2000; Wallingford et al., 2000). Likewise, defects in mesodermal convergent extension elicited by expression of interfering mutants of Xfz-7 or Xfz-8 can be rescued by co-expression of Xdsh, but not by other molecules that specifically activate the canonical Wnt pathway (Djiane et al., 2000; Wallingford et al., 2001b). Consistent with a role for planar polarity signaling, time-lapse analysis of cell behaviors has also revealed that Xdsh controls the polarity of the lamellipodial protrusions that drive convergent extension in the dorsal mesoderm (Wallingford et al., 2000).
In this report, we used interfering mutants of Wnt signaling components to address the possibility that a common mechanism regulates convergent extension in both neural and mesodermal cells, despite the tremendous differences in cell fates between the two tissues. Using targeted injections, explants and grafting, we have shown that mutants of Xdsh that can inhibit mesodermal convergent extension also directly inhibit neural convergent extension, indicating that a common, Xdsh-mediated control mechanism lies at the root of both processes. These findings reflect a general conservation of regulatory mechanisms in vertebrate convergent extension. Finally, these experiments highlight the relative contribution of both neural and mesodermal convergent extension to the coordinated elongation of the anteroposterior axis.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Keller sandwiches
To assess neural convergent extension directly, embryos were injected dorsally and animally at the four-cell stage and reared to gastrula stages as described above. At stage 10.5, 60° dorsal marginal zone explants were cut, centered on the midline of the dorsal blastopore lip. Dissections were made using eyebrow knives and forceps. Two explants were cut to the same size and sandwiched together (see Fig. 4A) under a raised coverslip until the sandwich had healed (about 1 hour); the coverslip was then removed and explants were cultured in agarose-coated dishes. All explants were cut and reared in 1x Steinbergs solution. Convergent extension was assessed when unmanipulated sibling control embryos had reached stage 20.
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Neural plate grafts and ablations
To assess neural convergent extension in vivo, heterochronic neural plate grafts were prepared as described (Mariani et al., 2001; Ribisi et al., 2000). RNA encoding either GFP or Xdsh-D2 was injected into the animal pole of both cells of two-cell embryos. Injected embryos were reared at 12° C overnight and sibling uninjected embryos were reared at 15° C. When uninjected embryos reached stage 11.5, the posterior neural ectoderm was removed using forceps and an eyebrow knife with embryos in agarose wells. For ablations, operated embryos were cultured in 1/3x MMR until tadpole stages and fixed in MEMFA. For grafts, an animal cap was removed from a stage 9 injected embryo and heterochronic grafts were made into the uninjected dissected embryo (see Fig. 8A). For healing, host and graft were transferred to a clay-bottomed dish, the graft was held in place on the host by coverglass supported with modeling clay, and cultured in 1x Steinbergs until it had healed (roughly 30 minutes), then transferred to agarose-coated dishes with 1/3x MMR and reared to tadpole stages. For mock operations, the neural plate was cut on three sides, separated from the underlying mesoderm and then replaced. Only embryos that finished gastrulation normally and closed their blastopores were analyzed. Notochords were measured using NIH image.
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RESULTS |
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Surprisingly, when injection of Xdsh-D2 was biased to the mesoderm by injection into the dorsal vegetal blastomeres at the eight-cell stage, a strikingly different phenotype was observed. When embryos reached stage 20, only a very few (12%, n=89) displayed failure of neural tube closure, and a few embryos had subtle defects in the fusion of the neural folds (Fig. 2D, arrowhead). The majority closed their neural tubes normally. When these embryos developed to stage 30, almost none displayed the prominent dorsal flexure that was characteristic of embryos injected animally at the eight-cell stage or dorsally at the four-cell stage. Instead, the A/P axes of these embryos remained straight, but were very severely shortened and somewhat wider compared with control embryos (Fig. 2G). Again, anterior structures appeared normal. This morphology is distinctly different from those injected in the dorsal animal blastomeres (Fig. 2F). Identical results were also obtained with targeted injections of the Xdsh-DEP (D6) mutant (data not shown), which (like Xdsh-D2) is functional for canonical Wnt signaling (Rothbächer et al., 2000) and inhibits mesodermal convergent extension (Wallingford et al., 2000).
The short stout morphology that resulted from Xdsh-D2 expression in the dorsal vegetal blastomeres was surprising, as it is distinctly different from previously reported convergent extension phenotypes. To ensure that the novel phenotype was not unique to the Xdsh-D2 construct, we targeted injections of another mutant of Xdsh, Xdd1. In previous studies, Xdd1 has been shown to inhibit convergent extension of the dorsal mesoderm without affecting cell fates (Sokol, 1996). Xdd1 generated distinctly different phenotypes when targeted to the mesoderm versus the ectoderm at similar frequencies to Xdsh-D2. When injected into the dorsal animal blastomeres, Xdd1 caused severe dorsal flexure and a failure to straighten the A/P axis (Fig. 2I), while targeting of Xdd1 to the dorsal vegetal blastomeres produced short and stout, but straight, embryos (Fig. 2J). Likewise, dorsal animal injections inhibited neural tube closure, while dorsal vegetal injections did not (data not shown).
Xdsh-D2 is fused to GFP, and we used GFP fluorescence as a lineage tracer of the injected mRNAs to confirm that our targeted injection did result in differential expression of the construct. When injected into the dorsal animal blastomeres at the 16-cell stage, embryos developed with open neural plates (not shown) and severe dorsal flexure (Fig. 3B), and GFP fluorescence was observed only in the dorsalmost tissues of the embryo (Fig. 3C), though the exact location was difficult to discern because of the distortion in embryo morphology. By contrast, embryos injected into the dorsal vegetal blastomeres at the 16-cell stage developed with shortened A/P axes, but no flexure (Fig. 3D), and GFP fluorescence was observed in both dorsal mesoderm and anterior endoderm, but was excluded from the neural tube (Fig. 3E).
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In control sandwich explants (Fig. 4B), both neural and mesodermal cells undergo convergent extension, and the two distinct domains of elongation can be observed. The mesoderm elongates less efficiently than does the neural tissue (Keller and Danilchik, 1988) and, as a result, does not narrow as extensively, forming a collar at the junction of the axial mesoderm and posterior neural ectoderm (Fig. 4A,B).
When Keller sandwiches were made from embryos injected with mRNA encoding Xdsh-D2, explants failed to elongate. In all cases, the neural ectoderm completely failed to elongate, and little elongation was observed in the mesoderm (Fig. 4C and see below). Furthermore, no distinction could be made between neural and mesodermal regions. Explants made from embryos expressing Xdd1 display the identical phenotype; they fail to elongate and no collar region can be identified (Fig. 4D).
It is important to note that targeted injection does not allow for expression exclusively in the ectoderm (Moody and Kline, 1990), and expression of Xdsh-D2 in the mesoderm likely accounts for its relatively weak elongation in experimental explants (Fig. 4C,D). Nonetheless, as we were interested in examining neural convergent extension, injections for this experiment were biased to the neural ectoderm, and GFP fluorescence indicated that Xdsh-D2 was present predominantly in the neural portion of explants (Fig. 4E). Mesodermal tissue lacking GFP fluorescence did elongate (Fig. 4E, arrows).
Inhibition of neural convergent extension by Xdsh-D2 is not secondary to changes in cell fate
The data above demonstrate that interference with non-canonical Wnt signaling by expression of Xdsh-D2 or Xdd1 inhibits neural convergent extension. As only posterior neural cell types undergo convergent extension (Keller et al., 1992b), this phenotype could be a secondary consequence of anteriorization of cell fate in the neural tube. In order to ensure that posterior neural cell fates are not altered by Xdsh-D2, we examined the expression of the posterior neural marker HoxB9 (Sharpe et al., 1987).
In control embryos, HoxB9 is expressed throughout the spinal cord (Fig. 5A). Likewise, embryos injected into dorsal animal blastomeres with Xdsh-D2 mRNA (Fig. 5B) express HoxB9 from just behind the head (arrows) all the way to the tip of the tail (arrowheads), despite the severe dorsal flexure.
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We also examined expression of the hindbrain marker Krox-20 (Bradley et al., 1993). In control embryos, Krox-20 is expressed in two discrete stripes in rhombomeres 3 and 5 (Fig. 5D,d'). Likewise, in embryos which display severe dorsal flexure after injection of Xdsh-D2 into the dorsal animal blastomeres, both bands can be distinguished (Fig. 5E,e'). In some of the more severely affected embryos, the orientation of the bands was sometimes distorted (Fig. 5F,f'), however no dramatic disruptions of Krox-20 expression were observed.
Because targeted injections do not allow for exclusive expression of Xdsh-D2 in either mesoderm or ectoderm, it is also important to rule out the possibility that expression of Xdsh-D2 in the mesoderm in some way alters neural cell fates and consequently inhibits neural convergent extension. However, both HoxB9 and Krox-20 staining is normal in embryos injected dorsovegetally with Xdsh-D2 (Fig. 5H). There is a slight decrease in the distance between the posterior Krox20 staining and the anteriormost HoxB9 staining in Xdsh-D2 injected embryos, probably due to the failure of the embryo to elongate.
Finally, we examined cell fate specification in the dorsal mesoderm using the notochord specific antibody Tor70 (Bolce et al., 1992). Notochords of control embryos were elongate and sometimes mildly flexed toward the ventral side (Fig. 6A,a'). In both animally and vegetally injected embryos, notochords remained very broad, and some notochords were bifurcated (Fig. 6B,C). In no case did Xdsh-D2 expression eliminate the notochord, consistent with the finding that inhibition of Xdsh function in the mesoderm with Xdd1 also suppresses convergent extension without affecting cell fates (Sokol, 1996). In embryos injected dorsoanimally, notochords were dorsally flexed (Fig. 6b'), while in dorsovegetally injected embryos, notochords were severely shortened, but remained straight (Fig. 6c').
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Xdsh-D2 inhibits convergent extension of XBF-2 expressing animal caps
Examination of the effects of mutants of Xdsh in both whole embryos and Keller sandwich explants strongly indicates that Xdsh is required for convergent extension in the neural ectoderm. Nonetheless, targeted injections do not allow for expression of mutant Xdsh constructs in the ectoderm exclusively, and while neural convergent extension is autonomous, it can be modulated by signals from the mesoderm, both by vertical interactions (Elul and Keller, 2000; Elul et al., 1997) and by planar interactions (Keller et al., 1992c). As Xdsh-D2 strongly inhibits convergent extension of the mesoderm, it is important to rule out the possibility that any observed effect of Xdsh-D2 on neural convergent extension is not a secondary result of expression of mutant Xdsh in the adjacent mesoderm.
To address this issue, we first examined the effects of Xdsh-D2 on neural convergent extension in the absence of mesoderm using animal caps expressing the transcription factor XBF-2, which can neuralize animal caps without inducing mesoderm (Mariani and Harland, 1998). Uninjected animal caps did not elongate when removed at stage 9 and cultured until stage 20 (Fig. 7A). However, XBF-2 can induce hindbrain and spinal cord cell fates (Mariani and Harland, 1998), and, as a result of neural convergent extension, nearly half of animal caps expressing XBF-2 elongated to some degree (Fig. 7B). In contrast, elongation was strongly suppressed in caps co-injected with XBF-2 and Xdsh-D2; only a very few caps elongated and that elongation was very subtle (Fig. 7C).
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Inhibition of neural convergent extension by grafting of Xdsh-D2-expressing cells allowed the effects of mutant Xdsh on neural morphogenesis to be assessed directly, without expression in the mesoderm. While grafts made with GFP-expressing cells formed normal neural tubes which closed and fused (Fig. 8C), grafts made with Xdsh-D2 failed to form closed neural tubes (Fig. 8D,E, arrows), consistent with the effects of targeted Xdsh-D2 expression (Fig. 2C).
Neural convergent extension is necessary for complete elongation of the A/P axis
The grafting experiments also provided information about the forces that elongate the normal A/P body axis. Unmanipulated embryos elongate and straighten the body axis between gastrulation and tadpole stages (Fig. 8F). Likewise, embryos grafted with GFP-expressing cells also elongate and straighten (Figs 8G, 9A). However, embryos grafted with Xdsh-D2-expressing cells developed with a pronounced dorsal curvature (Figs 8H, 9C). Similar dorsal flexure was observed after manual ablation of the posterior neural plate (Fig. 9D), while mock-operated sibling embryos developed normally (Fig. 9B).
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Other Wnt signaling components affect neural convergent extension
Several different components of the Wnt signaling network have been implicated in mesodermal convergent extension. In particular, Xenopus Wnt5a (Xwnt5a) and the interfering mutant of Xenopus Frizzled-8 (Nxfz-8) have both been shown to inhibit the non-canonical Wnt signals which control mesodermal convergent extension (Deardorff et al., 1998; Moon et al., 1993; Wallingford et al., 2001b). As Xdsh affects neural convergent extension, we also tested Xwnt5a and Nxfz-8 for their effects on neural convergent extension.
Xwnt5a has been shown to be an effective antagonist of mesodermal convergent extension, but does not inhibit dorsal cell fates (Moon et al., 1993; Torres et al., 1996). When Xwnt5a mRNA was injected into the dorsal animal blastomeres at the eight-cell stage, embryos developed with an obvious dorsal kink at about the level of the hindbrain (Fig. 10B). This flexure is less dramatic than that observed for Xdsh-D2 or Xdd1, but is consistent with the phenotype elicited by Xwnt5a injection at earlier stages (Moon et al., 1993). When Xwnt5a was targeted vegetally, no dorsal flexure was observed, and embryos developed with straight, but shortened, A/P axes (Fig. 10C). Likewise, when observed at stage 20, animally injected embryos displayed a failure of neural tube closure, while vegetally injected embryos displayed only defects in neural fold fusion (data not shown).
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The differential effects of Nxfz-8 and Xwnt5a when targeted to ectoderm versus mesoderm support the idea that Wnt signals modulate convergent extension in both neural and mesodermal tissues.
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DISCUSSION |
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Our data demonstrate that Xdsh signaling is a common mechanism that controls convergent extension in both dorsal mesoderm and posterior neural ectoderm of Xenopus. Despite the differences in cell fate and also in cell behaviors (Fig. 1), polarity decisions clearly play a key role in intercalation in both tissues. Our data support the hypothesis that a common molecular mechanism underlies the establishment of polarity in both neural and mesodermal convergent extension, and additional layers of regulation account for the differences in behaviors (Keller et al., 2000).
Finally, it should be noted that a similar mechanism of Wnt signaling controls convergent extension movements not only in Xenopus dorsal mesoderm and neural ectoderm, but also in the marginal zone of the zebrafish gastrula (Heisenberg et al., 2000). As such, the mechanisms that regulate convergent extension may be highly conserved throughout vertebrate tissues. Indeed, recent reports demonstrate that intercellular Ca2+ waves are also a common feature of convergent extension in all three of these tissues (Gilland et al., 1999; Leclerc et al., 2000; Wallingford et al., 2001a). It will be interesting to determine if similar mechanisms regulate convergent extension in invertebrate embryos, such as Drosophila (Irvine and Wieschaus, 1994) or sea urchins (Hardin, 1996).
Neural and mesodermal convergent extension cooperate with ventral elongation to form the anteroposterior body axis
During early Xenopus development, the elongation of the A/P axis of the trunk is driven by three autonomously elongating regions (Fig. 11A,B). The posterior neural ectoderm (hindbrain and spinal cord) and the underlying dorsal mesoderm (notochord and somites) elongate by convergent extension (Keller, 1975; Keller, 1976), and these movements are autonomous in each germ layer (Keller and Danilchik, 1988) Rearrangements of ventral cells autonomously extend the ventral portion of the embryo (Drawbridge and Steinberg, 2000; Larkin and Danilchik, 1999). In light of these observations, the two phenotypes that result from targeted injection predominantly in the ectoderm versus the mesoderm are consistent with failure of convergent extension in each tissue individually.
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However, when injection is targeted to the dorsal vegetal blastomeres, convergent extension is strongly blocked in the mesoderm, while neural convergent extension is much less affected. Failure of mesodermal convergent extension restricts the elongation of the A/P axis, and elongation of the neural ectoderm is equalized by that of the ventral tissues yielding short, stout embryos (Fig. 11D). Indeed, a slight ventral buckling of the elongating neural tube can be observed in the posterior spinal cord of these embryos (Fig. 5H), though notochords remain straight (Fig. 6C).
The failure of neural and ventral elongation to extend the A/P axis when mesodermal convergent extension is suppressed suggests that mesodermal convergent extension may be the key force elongating the axis. Nonetheless, the consistent reduction in notochord length that results from inhibited neural convergent extension (Fig. 10E) demonstrates that neural elongation does contribute actively to the extension of the A/P axis. As such, Xdsh-D2 grafted embryos develop with only a slightly shorter notochord, and elongation of the axial mesoderm and ventral tissues around the immobile neural tissue produces the observed dorsal flexure (Fig. 11E).
Together, these results implicate mesodermal convergent extension as the primary force in A/P axis elongation and a more minor role for neural convergent extension in this process. However, neural convergent extension is clearly required in parallel with mesodermal convergent extension for the generation of a straightened body axis.
Importance of targeted mRNA injection in Xenopus embryos
The identification of two distinct convergent extension phenotypes that results from subtly different injection sites is important, especially because dorsal injection of Wnt components at the four-cell stage generally results in dorsal flexure, a phenotype produced primarily by the failure of neural, not mesodermal, convergent extension. Indeed, generation of these two very different phenotypes does not require injection at the eight-cell stage; simply biasing injections animally or vegetally at the four-cell stage can generate the two distinct phenotypes (data not shown). While many components may be common to convergent extension mechanisms in both dorsal mesoderm and neural ectoderm, not all molecular controls will necessarily be the same in both tissues. As such, it is important to assess effects on convergent extension accurately in each tissue. More generally, these results highlight the importance of accurately targeting and tracing mRNA injections in Xenopus embryos.
The role of Xdsh and convergent extension in neural tube closure
Embryos that express Xdsh-D2 in the neural plate fail to close their neural tubes. In some cases, this failure may be a consequence of bifurcation of the notochord (Fig. 6B). However bifurcated notochords were not observed in embryos where Xdsh-D2 was expressed exclusively in the neural plate by grafting (not shown), though these embryos did fail to close their neural tubes (Fig. 8).
The open neural plate of these embryos is a striking phenotype, and it is particularly interesting that the failure of tube closure is restricted to the hindbrain and spinal cord. This phenotype may reflect a similarity to region-specific neural tube defects in humans, such as spina bifida or rachischisis, in which the cranial neural tube closes normally while more caudal regions fail to close (Juriloff and Harris, 2000). As such, it is possible that Xdsh and Wnt signaling plays a direct role in neural tube closure. Consistent with this hypothesis, analysis of cell behaviors during Xenopus neurulation has demonstrated that neural tube closure involves polarized protrusive activities in a number of cell types in the neural tube (Davidson and Keller, 1999). As Xdsh is directly involved in controlling both polarity and stability of similar protrusions in the mesoderm (Wallingford et al., 2000), these findings raise the possibility that Xdsh plays a similar role during neurulation.
While it is possible that Xdsh is directly involved in neural tube closure, it is also likely that the observed neural tube closure defects are to some degree a secondary consequence of a failure of convergent extension of the neural plate prior to overt neurulation. Several lines of evidence suggest that convergent extension of the neural plate contributes significantly to normal neural tube formation in amphibians (Davidson and Keller, 1999; Jacobson, 1994; Jacobson and Gordon, 1976) and also in the chick (Jacobson, 1984). Thus, the failure of neural tube closure in these embryos may be secondary to their failure to straighten the A/P axis, as curvature of the A/P axis has been shown to inhibit posterior neuropore closure in amniotes (Brook et al., 1991; van Straaten et al., 1993). The amphibian embryo may therefore provide a very simple model system in which to explore these neural tube defects.
Control of convergent extension cell movements by Xdsh is independent of the canonical Wnt pathway
In Drosophila, Dishevelled functions to transduce signals along at least two different Wnt pathways: the canonical Wnt/ß-catenin pathway and the planar cell polarity pathway (Boutros and Mlodzik, 1999). Both of these pathways are also used in the Xenopus mesoderm. Canonical Wnt signals induce dorsal cell fates in the early embryo (Miller et al., 1999), and ectopic Wnt signaling on the ventral side induces a secondary axis (Sokol et al., 1991). During gastrulation, non-canonical Wnt signals similar to PCP signaling control convergent extension of the dorsal mesoderm (Heisenberg et al., 2000; Tada and Smith, 2000; Wallingford et al., 2000; Wallingford et al., 2001b). Our data strongly indicate that a similar molecular mechanism is at work during convergent extension of the posterior neural ectoderm.
The distinction between canonical and non-canonical pathways is illustrated by the similar effects of Xdsh-D2 and Xdd1 on neural convergent extension (Figs 2, 4). Both Xdsh-D2 and Xdd1 have been shown to severely inhibit convergent extension in the dorsal mesoderm (Wallingford et al., 2000). However, the two constructs have opposite effects in secondary axis assays, Xdsh-D2 is fully functional for canonical Wnt signaling (Rothbächer et al., 2000), while Xdd1 inhibits these signals (Sokol, 1996). As these two mutants of Xdsh have indistinguishable effects on convergent extension in both neural ectoderm (this study) and dorsal mesoderm (Wallingford et al., 2000), Xdsh-mediated control of convergent extension is likely to be independent of canonical Wnt pathways in both tissues.
This role for non-canonical Wnt signaling is particularly intriguing in the neural tube, where canonical Wnt/ß-catenin signaling plays an important role in specifying cell fates (Baker et al., 1999; McGrew et al., 1997; McGrew et al., 1995). For example, expression of Xdsh-D2 inhibits convergent extension, but does not significantly alter the A/P pattern of the neural tube. However, inhibition of canonical Wnt signaling in the neural tube has dramatic effects on this pattern (McGrew et al., 1997; McGrew et al., 1995). As such, Xdsh may function simultaneously via canonical and non-canonical pathways to control both cell fate and cell motility in the posterior neural ectoderm.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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