31 research outputs found
Barx1-Mediated Inhibition of Wnt Signaling in the Mouse Thoracic Foregut Controls Tracheo-Esophageal Septation and Epithelial Differentiation
Mesenchymal cells underlying the definitive endoderm in vertebrate animals play a vital role in digestive and respiratory organogenesis. Although several signaling pathways are implicated in foregut patterning and morphogenesis, and despite the clinical importance of congenital tracheal and esophageal malformations in humans, understanding of molecular mechanisms that allow a single tube to separate correctly into the trachea and esophagus is incomplete. The homoebox gene Barx1 is highly expressed in prospective stomach mesenchyme and required to specify this organ. We observed lower Barx1 expression extending contiguously from the proximal stomach domain, along the dorsal anterior foregut mesenchyme and in mesenchymal cells between the nascent esophagus and trachea. This expression pattern exactly mirrors the decline in Wnt signaling activity in late development of the adjacent dorsal foregut endoderm and medial mainstem bronchi. The hypopharynx in Barx1â/â mouse embryos is abnormally elongated and the point of esophago-tracheal separation shows marked caudal displacement, resulting in a common foregut tube that is similar to human congenital tracheo-esophageal fistula and explains neonatal lethality. Moreover, the Barx1â/â esophagus displays molecular and cytologic features of respiratory endoderm, phenocopying abnormalities observed in mouse embryos with activated Ă-catenin. The zone of canonical Wnt signaling is abnormally prolonged and expanded in the proximal Barx1â/â foregut. Thus, as in the developing stomach, but distinct from the spleen, Barx1 control of thoracic foregut specification and tracheo-esophageal septation is tightly associated with down-regulation of adjacent Wnt pathway activity
Parasitoid biology preserved in mineralized fossils
About 50% of all animal species are considered parasites. The linkage of species diversity to a parasitic lifestyle is especially evident in the insect order Hymenoptera. However, fossil evidence for hostâparasitoid interactions is extremely rare, rendering hypotheses on the evolution of parasitism assumptive. Here, using high-throughput synchrotron X-ray microtomography, we examine 1510 phosphatized ïŹy pupae from the Paleogene of France and identify 55 parasitation events by four wasp species, providing morphological and ecological data. All species developed as solitary endoparasitoids inside their hosts and exhibit different morphological adaptations for exploiting the same hosts in one habitat. Our results allow systematic and ecological placement of four distinct endoparasitoids in the Paleogene and highlight the need to investigate ecological data preserved in the fossil record
Differential adaptation of REM sleep latency, intermediate stage and theta power effects of escitalopram after chronic treatment.
The effects of the widely used selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants on sleep have been intensively
investigated. However, only a few animal studies examined the
effect of escitalopram, the more potent S-enantiomer of
citalopram, and conclusions of these studies on sleep
architecture are limited due to the experimental design. Here,
we investigate the acute (2 and 10 mg/kg, i.p. injected at the
beginning of the passive phase) or chronic (10 mg/kg/day for 21
days, by osmotic minipumps) effects of escitalopram on the sleep
and quantitative electroencephalogram (EEG) of Wistar rats. The
first 3 h of EEG recording was analyzed at the beginning of
passive phase, immediately after injections. The acutely
injected 2 and 10 mg/kg and the chronically administered 10
mg/kg/day escitalopram caused an approximately three, six and
twofold increases in rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) latency,
respectively. Acute 2-mg/kg escitalopram reduced REMS, but
increased intermediate stage of sleep (IS) while the 10 mg/kg
reduced both. We also observed some increase in light slow wave
sleep and passive wake parallel with a decrease in deep slow
wave sleep and theta power in both active wake and REMS after
acute dosing. Following chronic treatment, only the increase in
REMS latency remained significant compared to control animals.
In conclusion, adaptive changes in the effects of escitalopram,
which occur after 3 weeks of treatment, suggest desensitization
in the function of 5-HT(1A) and 5-HT(1B) receptors
Homeostatic regulation of sleep in a genetic model of depression in the mouse effects of muscarinic and 5-HT1A receptor activation
In depressed patients, sleep undergoes marked alterations, especially sleep onset insomnia, sleep fragmentation, and disturbances of the Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep. Abnormalities of rest-activity rhythms and of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical function have also been described in these patients. In the present study, we examined the presence of such abnormalities in a recently developed line of mice (Helpless mice-H) that exhibit depression-like behaviors in validated tests, compared to the nonhelpless (NH) line derived from the same colony. Experiments were essentially carried out in females for which previous studies showed marked differences between H and NH lines. Compared to NH mice, the H line exhibited (i) lower basal locomotor activity, (ii) sleep fragmentation, shift towards lighter sleep stages, and facilitation of REM sleep reflected by increased amounts and decreased latency, (iii) larger response to the REM sleep promoting effect of muscarinic receptor stimulation (by arecoline). In contrast, H and NH mice were equally responsive to the REM sleep inhibitory effect of 5-HT1A receptor stimulation (by 8-OH-DPAT). In addition, a deficiency in delta power enhancement after sleep deprivation was observed in the H group, and acute immobilization stress in this group failed to elicit a REM sleep rebound and was associated with a long-lasting raise in serum corticosterone levels. These results further validate H mice as a depression model and suggest they might be of particular interest for investigating the neurobiological mechanisms and possibly genetic substrates underlying sleep alterations associated with depression