Role of the neural crest in development of the trabeculae and branchial arches in embryonic sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus (L)
Open Access
- 1 February 1988
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Development
- Vol. 102 (2) , 301-310
- https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.102.2.301
Abstract
Lamprey embryos were obtained by artificial fertilization to ascertain the contributions made by the neural crest to the head skeleton. Early-neurula-stage embryos of Petromyzon marinus were subjected to neural crest extirpation along the anterior half from one of seven zones, raised to a larval stage at which control larvae exhibit well-developed skeletons and analysed by light microscopy for any abnormalities to the cranial and visceral skeleton. The removal of premigratory neural crest at the level of the anterior prosencephalon (zone I) and at the level of somites 6 to 8 (zone VII) had no effect on skeletal development. However, the extirpation of neural crest from the intervening regions was positively correlated with deletions/reductions to the trabeculae (basicranial elements) and to the branchial arches (viscerocranial elements). Alterations to the trabeculae (16/27 cases, or 59 %) occurred only after extirpation of zones II-V (corresponding to the posterior prosencephalon to midrhombencephalon) while alterations to the branchial arches (21/28 cases, or 75 %) occurred only after removal of neural crest from zones IH-VI (corresponding to the mesencephalon to the level of the fifth somite). Furthermore, the first three branchial arches were correlated in a majority of cases with neural crest from zone III, the next two arches with zones IV, V and VI and the last two arches with zone VI. Organs that develop within or adjacent to the area of neural crest extirpation such as the brain, notochord and lateral mesodermal derivatives were not affected. Parachordals were never altered by the operations nor were there any discernible changes to developing mucocartilage or to the prechondrogenic otic capsule. The contributions of the neural crest to the petromyzo-nid head skeleton described herein are compared with the roles of neural crest in the development of cranial and visceral skeletal elements in other vertebrates. The importance of these findings to the current hypothesis of the phylogeny of the vertebrate skeleton and the central role of the neural crest in vertebrate cephalization is discussed.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The role of the neural crest in patterning of avian cranial skeletal, connective, and muscle tissuesDevelopmental Biology, 1983
- The Genesis of Neural Crest and Epidermal Placodes: A Reinterpretation of Vertebrate OriginsThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1983
- The effect of pH on tricaine methanesulfonate induced anaesthesia of the newt Notophthalmus viridescensCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1983
- An analysis of the migratory behavior of avian cephalic neural crest cellsDevelopmental Biology, 1975
- Further studies on the origin of amphibian pigment cellsJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1954
- An analysis of regulation in the amphibian neural crestJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1952
- Studies on the development of the dorsal fin in amphibiansJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1952
- ON THE DEVELOPMENT AND MORPHOLOGY OF THE SKELETON OF THE HEAD OF PETROMYZONActa Zoologica, 1948
- Observations upon the migration of neural crest cells, and upon the development of the spinal ganglia and vertebral arches in AmblystomaJournal of Anatomy, 1937
- An experimental study of the origin of pigment cells in AmphibiaJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1935