Hedgehog and Notch signaling in enteric nervous system development.

Q1 Medicine
Neurosignals Pub Date : 2014-01-01 Epub Date: 2013-12-14 DOI:10.1159/000356305
Jessica Ai-jia Liu, Elly Sau-Wai Ngan
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引用次数: 28

Abstract

The enteric nervous system (ENS) in mammals is derived from a small pool of progenitor cells, namely enteric neural crest cells (NCCs). These precursor cells proliferate extensively to expand, migrate over a long distance to fully colonize the developing gut and differentiate into millions of neurons and glia to form a functional ENS for regulating the complex behaviors of the gut. This developmental process relies on a precise regulation of the neuronal and glial differentiation and requires an appropriate balance between the migration, proliferation and differentiation of enteric NCCs and their progeny. Hedgehog (Hh) and Notch signalings are essential for almost every aspect of ENS development, and they confer both the long- and short-range signals to coordinate these seemingly diverse cellular processes. In this review, we summarize the roles of Hh and Notch signaling, particularly in the context of gut organogenesis and ENS development and emphasize how combinatory Hh and Notch signaling renders functional diversity as well as specificity.

肠神经系统发育中的Hedgehog和Notch信号。
哺乳动物的肠神经系统(ENS)来源于一小群祖细胞,即肠神经嵴细胞(NCCs)。这些前体细胞广泛增殖扩张,长距离迁移,完全定植于发育中的肠道,并分化成数百万个神经元和胶质细胞,形成功能性ENS,调节肠道的复杂行为。这一发育过程依赖于对神经元和胶质细胞分化的精确调控,需要肠道ncc及其后代的迁移、增殖和分化之间的适当平衡。Hedgehog (Hh)和Notch信号对于ENS发育的几乎每个方面都是必不可少的,它们提供了远程和短程信号来协调这些看似不同的细胞过程。在这篇综述中,我们总结了Hh和Notch信号的作用,特别是在肠道器官发生和ENS发展的背景下,并强调Hh和Notch信号组合如何呈现功能多样性和特异性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurosignals
Neurosignals 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Neurosignals is an international journal dedicated to publishing original articles and reviews in the field of neuronal communication. Novel findings related to signaling molecules, channels and transporters, pathways and networks that are associated with development and function of the nervous system are welcome. The scope of the journal includes genetics, molecular biology, bioinformatics, (patho)physiology, (patho)biochemistry, pharmacology & toxicology, imaging and clinical neurology & psychiatry. Reported observations should significantly advance our understanding of neuronal signaling in health & disease and be presented in a format applicable to an interdisciplinary readership.
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