Lack of an adrenal cortex in Sf1 mutant mice is compatible with the generation and differentiation of chromaffin cells.
2005
The diversification of neural-crest-derived sympathoadrenal (SA) progenitor
cells into sympathetic neurons and neuroendocrine adrenal chromaffin cells was
thought to be largely understood. In-vitro studies with isolated SA progenitor
cells had suggested that chromaffin cell differentiation depends crucially on
glucocorticoids provided by adrenal cortical cells. However, analysis of mice
lacking the glucocorticoid receptor gene had revealed that adrenal chromaffin
cells develop mostly normally in these mice. Alternative cues from the adrenal
cortex that may promote chromaffin cell determination and differentiation have
not been identified. We therefore investigated whether the chromaffin cell
phenotype can develop in the absence of an adrenal cortex, using mice
deficient for the nuclear orphan receptor steroidogenic factor-1 (SF1), which
lack adrenal cortical cells and gonads. We show that in
Sf1 –/– mice typical chromaffin cells assemble
correctly in the suprarenal region adjacent to the suprarenal sympathetic
ganglion. The cells display most features of chromaffin cells, including the
typical large chromaffin granules. Sf1 –/–
chromaffin cells are numerically reduced by about 50% compared with the wild
type at embryonic day (E) 13.5 and E17.5. This phenotype is not accounted for
by reduced survival or cell proliferation beyond E12.5. However, already at
E12.5 the `adrenal9 region in Sf1 –/– mice is
occupied by fewer PHOX2B + and TH + SA cells as well as
SOX10 + neural crest cells. Our results suggest that cortical cues
are not essential for determining chromaffin cell fate, but may be required
for proper migration of SA progenitors to and/or colonization of the adrenal
anlage.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
35
References
65
Citations
NaN
KQI