Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 471, March 2021, Pages 76-88
Developmental Biology

Taste buds are not derived from neural crest in mouse, chicken, and zebrafish

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2020.12.013Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Neural crest-derived cells are not seen in taste buds in mouse, chicken, and zebrafish.

  • Sox10-iCreERT2 is ideal for neural crest lineage mapping in mouse.

  • GFP+/GFP chicken chimera is valuable for longitudinally tracking neural crest cells.

Abstract

Our lineage tracing studies using multiple Cre mouse lines showed a concurrent labeling of abundant taste bud cells and the underlying connective tissue with a neural crest (NC) origin, warranting a further examination on the issue of whether there is an NC derivation of taste bud cells. In this study, we mapped NC cell lineages in three different models, Sox10-iCreERT2/tdT mouse, GFP+ neural fold transplantation to GFP chickens, and Sox10-Cre/GFP-RFP zebrafish model. We found that in mice, Sox10-iCreERT2 specifically labels NC cell lineages with a single dose of tamoxifen at E7.5 and that the labeled cells were widely distributed in the connective tissue of the tongue. No labeled cells were found in taste buds or the surrounding epithelium in the postnatal mice. In the GFP+/GFP chicken chimera model, GFP+ cells migrated extensively to the cranial region of chicken embryos ipsilateral to the surgery side but were absent in taste buds in the base of oral cavity and palate. In zebrafish, Sox10-Cre/GFP-RFP faithfully labeled known NC-derived tissues but did not label taste buds in lower jaw or the barbel. Our data, together with previous findings in axolotl, indicate that taste buds are not derived from NC cells in rodents, birds, amphibians or teleost fish.

Keywords

Taste buds
Neural crest
Progenitors
Mouse
Chicken
Zebrafish

Cited by (0)

1

These authors contributed equally to the work.

2

Present address: (YY) Department of Food and Life Sciences, College of Agriculture, Ibaraki University, Ami, Japan; (XC) Institutes of Biomedical Sciences, Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology and Molecular Engineering of National Ministry of Education, Shanxi University, Taiyuan, China; and (FK) Physiology of Domestic Animals, Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science, Hirosaki University, Hirosaki, Japan.