Anatomy and Embryology

, Volume 202, Issue 5, pp 401–410 | Cite as

Developmental origin of avian Merkel cells

  • M. Grim
  • Zdenek Halata
Original article

Abstract 

We have investigated the developmental origin and ultrastructure of avian Merkel cells by electron microscopy and chick/quail transplantation experiments.

On embryonic day 3, chick leg primordia were homotopically grafted onto Japanese quail host embryo. Fourteen days later, quail cells that had migrated into grafted chick legs were identified according to the masses of heterochromatin associated with the nucleolus that are characteristic for quail. Both in chick and quail, Merkel cells are usually located in the dermis just below the epidermis. They are placed between nerve terminals either individually or in small groups wrapped in sheaths that are formed by glial cell processes. Occasionally, some Merkel cells appear in nerve fascicles and within Herbst corpuscles. Merkel cells, as well as glial cells, in grafted chicken legs were of quail origin. This finding provides evidence against the epidermal origin of avian Merkel cells and indicates that Merkel cells are derived from neural crest cells that colonise, together with glial cells and melanocytes, the developing limb primordium.

Key words Merkel cells Developmental origin Neural crest Chick-quail chimeras TEM 

Preview

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Copyright information

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2000

Authors and Affiliations

  • M. Grim
    • 1
  • Zdenek Halata
    • 2
  1. 1.Institute of Anatomy, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, U nemocnice 3, 128 00 Prague 2, Czech Republic e-mail: milos.grim@lf1.cuni.cz Tel.: +420 2 2492 0114, Fax: +420 2 2491 9526CZ
  2. 2.Department of Functional Anatomy, Institute of Anatomy, University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Martinistrasse 52, 20246 Hamburg, Germany e-mail: halata@uke.uni-hamburg.de Tel.: +49-40-428032577, Fax: +49-40-428032845DE

Personalised recommendations