[HTML][HTML] The avian embryo as a model to study the development of the neural crest: a long and still ongoing story

NM Le Douarin - Mechanisms of development, 2004 - Elsevier
NM Le Douarin
Mechanisms of development, 2004Elsevier
The aim of this review is to evoke briefly the progress that has been made in our knowledge
about the contribution of the neural crest to the vertebrate body since it was discovered by
Wilhelm His in 1868. Although first studied essentially in amphibian embryos, a large
amount of what is known on this very special structure was gained by experimental work
carried out on the avian embryo. The making of chimeras between quail and chick has
permitted not only to analyse the normal course of neural crest cell migration and …
The aim of this review is to evoke briefly the progress that has been made in our knowledge about the contribution of the neural crest to the vertebrate body since it was discovered by Wilhelm His in 1868. Although first studied essentially in amphibian embryos, a large amount of what is known on this very special structure was gained by experimental work carried out on the avian embryo. The making of chimeras between quail and chick has permitted not only to analyse the normal course of neural crest cell migration and differentiation but also to reveal some of the cellular interactions that regulate these events. Looking to the future, we can foresee that the novel methods, which now allow to manipulate gene activities in definite groups of cells and at elected times in the developing embryo, will make the avian model even more instrumental than ever to approach the developmental problems raised by neural crest cell differentiation.
Elsevier