## Abstract Endochondral bone formation requires a complex interplay among immature mesenchymal progenitor cells to form the cartilaginous anlagen, which involves migration, aggregation and condensation. Even though condensation of chondrogenic progenitors is an essential step in this process, its
Role of N-cadherin in the sorting-out of mesenchymal cells and in the positional identity along the proximodistal axis of the chick limb bud
✍ Scribed by Hiroshi Yajima; Sayuri Yonei-Tamura; Noboru Watanabe; Koji Tamura; Hiroyuki Ide
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 817 KB
- Volume
- 216
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1058-8388
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✦ Synopsis
Mesenchymal cells from different stages of chick limb buds sort out in monolayer culture, suggesting the presence of different cell affinities dependent on their positions along the proximodistal axis. However, it is still not clear which molecules are responsible for the sorting-out. Here, we propose that N-cadherin, a cell-adhesion molecule, is involved in the sortingout and is likely to be a component of the mechanism of proximodistal patterning in the developing limb. N-cadherin proteins accumulate in the distal region of the chick limb bud as limb development proceeds. In monolayer culture of distal mesenchymal cells, the stage-dependent levels of N-cadherin proteins are maintained during cell sorting. The results of this study have also demonstrated that an anti-N-cadherin monoclonal antibody, NCD-2, clearly inhibits the cell sorting. Moreover, removal of the apical ectodermal ridge or retinoic-acid treatment of distal cells, which results in a change in the pattern of sorting-out, inhibits the accumulation of N-cadherin proteins, suggesting that the distribution of these proteins is related to the positional identity that gives rise to the different shape and number of cartilage elements along the proximodistal axis.
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## Abstract Cartilage formation in the embryonic limb is presaged by a cellular condensation phase that is mediated by both cell–cell and cell–matrix interactions. N‐Cadherin, a Ca^2+^‐dependent cell–cell adhesion molecule, is expressed at higher levels in the condensing mesenchyme, followed by dow