98%
921
2 minutes
20
Background: Cells derived from the neural crest colonize the developing gut and give rise to the enteric nervous system. The rate at which the ENCC population advances along the bowel will be affected by both the speed and directionality of individual ENCCs. The aim of the study was to use time-lapse imaging and pharmacological activators and inhibitors to examine the role of several intracellular signalling pathways in both the speed and the directionality of individual enteric neural crest-derived cells in intact explants of E12.5 mouse gut. Drugs that activate or inhibit intracellular components proposed to be involved in GDNF-RET and EDN3-ETB signalling in ENCCs were used.
Findings: Pharmacological inhibition of JNK significantly reduced ENCC speed but did not affect ENCC directionality. MEK inhibition did not affect ENCC speed or directionality. Pharmacological activation of adenylyl cyclase or PKA (a downstream cAMP-dependent kinase) resulted in a significant decrease in ENCC speed and an increase in caudal directionality of ENCCs. In addition, adenylyl cyclase activation also resulted in reduced cell-cell contact between ENCCs, however this was not observed following PKA activation, suggesting that the effects of cAMP on adhesion are not mediated by PKA.
Conclusions: JNK is required for normal ENCC migration speed, but not directionality, while cAMP signalling appears to regulate ENCC migration speed, directionality and adhesion. Collectively, our data demonstrate that intracellular signalling pathways can differentially affect the speed and directionality of migrating ENCCs.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2019.07.007 | DOI Listing |
J Acoust Soc Am
September 2025
School of Ocean Engineering and Technology, Sun Yat-sen University, Zhuhai 519000, China.
This study establishes a quantitative framework using field observations and normal mode theory to reveal wind field control mechanisms over ambient noise vertical directionality in shallow water. Acoustic data from a vertical line array in the northern South China Sea, combined with sound speed profiles, seabed properties, and multi-source wind fields (ERA5 reanalysis/Weibull-distributed synthetics), demonstrate: (1) A 20-km spatial noise-energy threshold (>90% energy contribution), challenging conventional near-field assumptions (1-2 km); (2) frequency-dependent distribution: low-frequency (50-200 Hz) directionality depends on near-field sources, while high-frequency (>400 Hz) energy shifts seaward due to modal cutoff variations; (3) model validation shows 0.96 correlation at 100 Hz/100 km (stratified medium accuracy), but seabed interface waves induce 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
September 2025
Tim Taylor Department of Chemical Engineering, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506, United States.
Stimuli-responsive hydrogels that provide controlled degradation can be used as bacteria delivery systems for advanced therapeutic applications. Here, we report the first use of photodegradable hydrogels as materials that can direct bacterial movement, tune mean bacteria speed, and control bacteria delivery through spatiotemporal control of degradation. Hydrogels were formed using base-catalyzed Michael addition reactions between photodegradable poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) -nitrobenzyl diacrylate macromers and PEG tetra-thiol cross-linkers within microfluidic channels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
August 2025
Laboratory for Physical Biology, RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research, Kobe, Japan.
Migration of cell populations is a fundamental process in morphogenesis and disease. The mechanisms of collective cell migration of epithelial cell populations have been well studied. It remains unclear, however, how the highly motile mesenchymal cells, which migrate extensively throughout the embryo, are connected with each other and coordinated as a collective.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vet Sci
July 2025
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 UPM Serdang, Malaysia.
Importance: African swine fever (ASF) is a significant transboundary disease with profound global economic impacts. ASF, caused by the virus, is highly resilient and has caused substantial economic losses in affected regions, with no available vaccination or treatment. We conducted a comprehensive analysis of the spatial clusters and potential factors contributing to the ASF epidemic in China from August 2018 to April 2021.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
June 2025
Gulliver, ESPCI, CNRS, Université PSL, Paris, France.
Catalysts speed up chemical reactions with no energy input and without being transformed in the process, therefore leaving equilibrium constants unchanged. Some catalysts, however, are much more efficient at accelerating one direction of a reaction. Is it possible for catalysis to be strictly unidirectional, accelerating only one direction of a reaction? Can we observe directional catalysis by analyzing the microscopic trajectory of a single reactant undergoing conversions between a substrate and a product state? We use the framework of a simple but exactly solvable lattice model to study these questions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF