Transient expression of the bHLH factor neurogenin-2 marks a subpopulation of neural crest cells biased for a sensory but not a neuronal fate

  1. Mariela Zirlinger*,
  2. Liching Lo*,,
  3. Jill McMahon,
  4. Andrew P. McMahon, and
  5. David J. Anderson*,,§
  1. *Division of Biology 216-76, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125; and Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
  1. Communicated by Douglas A. Melton, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (received for review February 6, 2002)

Abstract

Lineage-tracing experiments have indicated that some premigratory neural crest cells (NCCs) are pleuripotent, generating sensory and sympathetic neurons and their associated glia. Using an inducible Cre recombinase-based fate mapping system, we have permanently marked a subpopulation of NCCs that expresses Ngn2, a bHLH transcription factor required for sensory neurogenesis, and compared its fate to the bulk NCC population marked by expression of Wnt1. Ngn2 + progenitors were four times more likely than Wnt1 + NCCs to contribute to sensory rather than sympathetic ganglia. Within dorsal root ganglia, however, both Ngn2- and Wnt1-expressing cells were equally likely to generate neurons or glia. These data suggest that Ngn2 marks an NCC subpopulation with a predictable fate bias, early in migration. Taken together with previous work, these data suggest that NCCs become restricted to sensory or autonomic sublineages before becoming committed to neuronal or glial fates.

Footnotes

  • § To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: wuwei{at}caltech.edu.

  • Abbreviations:
    DRG,
    dorsal root ganglia;
    SG,
    sympathetic ganglia;
    NCCs,
    neural crest cells;
    4-OH Txf,
    4-hydroxy tamoxifen;
    BFABP,
    brain fatty acid binding protein;
    E,
    embryonic day
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