Evolution of the hypoxia-sensitive cells involved in amniote respiratory reflexes

Dorit Hockman(University of Cape Town), Alan J. Burns(Washington University in St. Louis), Gerhard Schlosser(Ollscoil na Gaillimhe – University of Galway), Keith P. Gates(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), Benjamin Jevans(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Alessandro Mongera(University of California, Santa Barbara), Shannon Fisher(Boston University), Gökhan Ünlü(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Ela W. Knapik(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Charles K. Kaufman(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Christian Mosimann(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Leonard I. Zon(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Joseph J. Lancman(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), P. Duc Si Dong(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), Heiko Lickert(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Abigail S. Tucker(King's College London), Clare V. H. Baker(Washington University in St. Louis)
eLife
April 7, 2017
Cited by 78Open Access
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Abstract

The evolutionary origins of the hypoxia-sensitive cells that trigger amniote respiratory reflexes - carotid body glomus cells, and 'pulmonary neuroendocrine cells' (PNECs) - are obscure. Homology has been proposed between glomus cells, which are neural crest-derived, and the hypoxia-sensitive 'neuroepithelial cells' (NECs) of fish gills, whose embryonic origin is unknown. NECs have also been likened to PNECs, which differentiate in situ within lung airway epithelia. Using genetic lineage-tracing and neural crest-deficient mutants in zebrafish, and physical fate-mapping in frog and lamprey, we find that NECs are not neural crest-derived, but endoderm-derived, like PNECs, whose endodermal origin we confirm. We discover neural crest-derived catecholaminergic cells associated with zebrafish pharyngeal arch blood vessels, and propose a new model for amniote hypoxia-sensitive cell evolution: endoderm-derived NECs were retained as PNECs, while the carotid body evolved via the aggregation of neural crest-derived catecholaminergic (chromaffin) cells already associated with blood vessels in anamniote pharyngeal arches.


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