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Publication : Developmental fate of the mammalian myotome.

First Author  Deries M Year  2010
Journal  Dev Dyn Volume  239
Issue  11 Pages  2898-910
PubMed ID  20865781 Mgi Jnum  J:165409
Mgi Id  MGI:4837275 Doi  10.1002/dvdy.22425
Citation  Deries M, et al. (2010) Developmental fate of the mammalian myotome. Dev Dyn 239(11):2898-910
abstractText  The myotome is a segmented paraxial muscle present in all early vertebrate embryos, which in amniotes disappears in mid-embryogenesis, and is replaced by complex epaxial and hypaxial musculature. Little is known about how this transition occurs. Here, we describe the detailed morphogenesis of the epaxial muscles from the epaxial myotome, in rodent embryos. The results show there is no apoptosis of myotomal fibres during the transition, and that the epaxial muscles arise by translocation, re-orientation, and elongation of the myotomal myocytes followed by cleavage of the myotomal masses. Myotomal myocytes transit from a mononucleated to a multinucleated state just before onset of this transformation. Each newly-formed epaxial muscle anlagen includes populations of Pax3- and Pax7-positive muscle progenitors, with different distributions. Using transgenic mouse embryos bearing a GFP marker for Scleraxis, we show that tendon progenitors are tightly associated with the sides and ends of myotomal myocytes as they re-orient and elongate.
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