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Publication : Dicer is required for survival of differentiating neural crest cells.

First Author  Zehir A Year  2010
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  340
Issue  2 Pages  459-67
PubMed ID  20144605 Mgi Jnum  J:160261
Mgi Id  MGI:4453939 Doi  10.1016/j.ydbio.2010.01.039
Citation  Zehir A, et al. (2010) Dicer is required for survival of differentiating neural crest cells. Dev Biol 340(2):459-67
abstractText  The neural crest (NC) lineage gives rise to a wide array of cell types ranging from neurons and glia of the peripheral nervous system to skeletal elements of the head. The mechanisms regulating NC differentiation into such a large number of cell types remain largely unknown. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play key roles in regulating developmental events suggesting they may also play a role during NC differentiation. To determine what roles miRNAs play in differentiation of NC-derived tissues, we deleted the miRNA processing gene Dicer in NC cells using the Wnt1-Cre deleter line. We show that deletion of Dicer soon after NC cells have formed does not affect their migration and colonization of their targets in the embryo. However, the post-migratory NC is dependent on Dicer for survival. In the head, loss of Dicer leads to a loss of NC-derived craniofacial bones while in the trunk, cells of the enteric, sensory and sympathetic nervous systems are lost during development. We found that loss of Dicer does not prevent the initial differentiation of NC but as development progresses, NC derivatives are lost due to apoptotic cell death. When Dicer is deleted, both Caspase-dependent and -independent apoptotic pathways are activated in the sensory ganglia but only the Caspase-dependent apoptotic program was activated in the sympathetic nervous system showing that the specific endogenous apoptotic programs are turned on by loss of Dicer. Our results show that Dicer and miRNAs, are required for survival of NC-derived tissues by preventing apoptosis during differentiation.
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