4.8 Article

Formation of a Neurosensory Organ by Epithelial Cell Slithering

Journal

CELL
Volume 163, Issue 2, Pages 394-405

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.09.021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NHLBI Progenitor Cell Biology Consortium [5U01HL099995]
  2. Stanford Child Health Research Institute
  3. Parker B. Francis Foundation Fellowship
  4. NIH NHLBI K12 Scholar Award

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Epithelial cells are normally stably anchored, maintaining their relative positions and association with the basement membrane. Developmental rearrangements occur through cell intercalation, and cells can delaminate during epithelial-mesenchymal transitions and metastasis. We mapped the formation of lung neuroepithelial bodies (NEBs), innervated clusters of neuroendocrine/neurosensory cells within the bronchial epithelium, revealing a targeted mode of cell migration that we named slithering,'' in which cells transiently lose epithelial character but remain associated with the membrane while traversing neighboring epithelial cells to reach cluster sites. Immunostaining, lineage tracing, clonal analysis, and live imaging showed that NEB progenitors, initially distributed randomly, downregulate adhesion and polarity proteins, crawling over and between neighboring cells to converge at diametrically opposed positions at bronchial branchpoints, where they reestablish epithelial structure and express neuroendocrine genes. There is little accompanying progenitor proliferation or apoptosis. Activation of the slithering program may explain why lung cancers arising from neuroendocrine cells are highly metastatic.

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