Amanda J. Barlow
UCL Institute of Child Health
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Featured researches published by Amanda J. Barlow.
Neuron | 2003
Amanda J. Barlow; Esther de Graaff; Vassilis Pachnis
The enteric nervous system (ENS) in vertebrates is derived mainly from vagal neural crest cells that enter the foregut and colonize the entire wall of the gastrointestinal tract. Failure to completely colonize the gut results in the absence of enteric ganglia (Hirschsprungs disease). Two signaling systems mediated by RET and EDNRB have been identified as critical players in enteric neurogenesis. We demonstrate that interaction between these signaling pathways controls ENS development throughout the intestine. Activation of EDNRB specifically enhances the effect of RET signaling on the proliferation of uncommitted ENS progenitors. In addition, we reveal novel antagonistic roles of these pathways on the migration of ENS progenitors. Protein kinase A is a key component of the molecular mechanisms that integrate signaling by the two receptors. Our data provide strong evidence that the coordinate and balanced interaction between receptor tyrosine kinases and G protein-coupled receptors controls the development of the nervous system in mammals.
Nature | 2007
Henrique Veiga-Fernandes; Mark Coles; Katie Foster; Amisha Patel; Adam Williams; Dipa Natarajan; Amanda J. Barlow; Vassilis Pachnis; Dimitris Kioussis
Normal organogenesis requires co-ordinate development and interaction of multiple cell types, and is seemingly governed by tissue specific factors. Lymphoid organogenesis during embryonic life is dependent on molecules the temporal expression of which is tightly regulated. During this process, haematopoietic ‘inducer’ cells interact with stromal ‘organizer’ cells, giving rise to the lymphoid organ primordia. Here we show that the haematopoietic cells in the gut exhibit a random pattern of motility before aggregation into the primordia of Peyer’s patches, a major component of the gut-associated lymphoid tissue. We further show that a CD45+CD4-CD3-Il7Rα-c-Kit+CD11c+ haematopoietic population expressing lymphotoxin has an important role in the formation of Peyer’s patches. A subset of these cells expresses the receptor tyrosine kinase RET, which is essential for mammalian enteric nervous system formation. We demonstrate that RET signalling is also crucial for Peyer’s patch formation. Functional genetic analysis revealed that Gfra3-deficiency results in impairment of Peyer’s patch development, suggesting that the signalling axis RET/GFRα3/ARTN is involved in this process. To support this hypothesis, we show that the RET ligand ARTN is a strong attractant of gut haematopoietic cells, inducing the formation of ectopic Peyer’s patch-like structures. Our work strongly suggests that the RET signalling pathway, by regulating the development of both the nervous and lymphoid system in the gut, has a key role in the molecular mechanisms that orchestrate intestine organogenesis.
Gastroenterology | 2009
Marco Metzger; Claire Caldwell; Amanda J. Barlow; Alan J. Burns; Nikhil Thapar
BACKGROUND & AIMS Enteric nervous system stem cells (ENSSCs) provide potential therapeutic tools to replenish absent ganglia in Hirschsprungs disease. Although full-thickness human postnatal gut tissue can be used to generate ENSSCs, reliance on its harvesting from surgical resection poses significant practical limitations. This study aimed to explore whether gut tissue obtained utilizing minimally invasive routine endoscopy techniques could be used to generate ENSSCs and whether such cells retain the potential to generate an ENS upon transplantation into aganglionic gut. METHODS Postnatal human gut mucosal tissue obtained from children undergoing gastrointestinal endoscopy was used to generate cell cultures in which ENSSCs were contained within neurosphere-like bodies (NLBs). These NLBs were characterized by immunostaining, and their potential to generate components of the ENS, in vitro and upon transplantation into models of aganglionic gut, was examined. RESULTS Gut mucosal biopsy specimens were obtained from 75 children (age, 9 months-17 years). The biopsy specimens contained neural cells and ENSSCs and, on culturing, generated characteristic NLBs at all ages examined. Postnatal mucosa-derived NLBs contained cells that, akin to their embryonic counterparts, were proliferating, expressed ENSSC markers, were bipotent, and capable of generating large colonies in clonogenic cultures and multiple ENS neuronal subtypes. Upon transplantation, cells from NLBs colonized cultured recipient aganglionic chick and human hindgut to generate ganglia-like structures and enteric neurons and glia. CONCLUSIONS The results represent a significant practical advance toward the development of definitive cell replenishment therapies for ENS disorders such as Hirschsprungs disease.
Development | 2006
Nadege Bondurand; Dipa Natarajan; Amanda J. Barlow; Nikhil Thapar; Vassilis Pachnis
The transcriptional regulator SOX10 and the signalling molecule endothelin 3 have important roles in the development of the mammalian enteric nervous system (ENS). Using a clonal cell culture system, we show that SOX10 inhibits overt neuronal and glial differentiation of multilineage ENS progenitor cells (EPCs), without interfering with their neurogenic commitment. We also demonstrate that endothelin 3 inhibits reversibly the commitment and differentiation of EPCs along the neurogenic and gliogenic lineages, suggesting a role for this factor in the maintenance of multilineage ENS progenitors. Consistent with such a role, the proportion of Sox10-expressing progenitors in the total population of enteric neural crest cells is reduced in the gut of endothelin 3-deficient embryos. This reduction may be related to the requirement of endothelin signalling for the proliferation of ENS progenitors. The dependence of ENS progenitors on endothelin 3 is more pronounced at the migratory front of enteric neural crest cells, which is associated with relatively high levels of endothelin 3 mRNA. Our findings indicate that SOX10 and endothelin 3 have a crucial role in the maintenance of multilineage enteric nervous system progenitors.
Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2009
As Wallace; Amanda J. Barlow; L. Navaratne; J‐m. Delalande; S. Tauszig‐delamasure; V. Corset; Nikhil Thapar; Alan J. Burns
Abstract The enteric nervous system (ENS) is derived from vagal and sacral neural crest cells (NCC) that delaminate from the neural tube and undergo extensive migration and proliferation in order to colonize the entire length of the gut and differentiate into many millions of neurons and glial cells. Although apoptotic programmed cell death is an essential physiological process during development of the majority of the vertebrate nervous system, apoptosis within early ENS development has not been comprehensively investigated. The aim of this study was to determine the presence and extent of apoptosis within the vagal NCC population that gives rise to most of the ENS in the chick embryo. We demonstrated that apoptotic cells, as shown by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase biotin‐dUTP nick end labelling and active caspase‐3 immunoreactivity, are present within an electroporated green fluorescent protein (GFP) and human natural killer‐1 (HNK‐1) immunopositive NCC population migrating from the vagal region of the neural tube to the developing foregut. Inhibition of caspase activity in vagal NCC, by electroporation with a dominant‐negative form of caspase‐9, increased the number of vagal NCC available for ENS formation, as shown by 3‐dimensional reconstruction of serial GFP or HNK‐1 labelled sections, and resulted in hyperganglionosis within the proximal foregut, as shown by NADPH‐diaphorase whole gut staining. These findings suggest that apoptotic cell death may be a normal process within the precursor pool of pre‐enteric NCC that migrates to the gut, and as such it may play a role in the control of ENS formation.
Development | 2008
Amanda J. Barlow; As Wallace; Nikhil Thapar; Alan J. Burns
Journal of Hepatology | 2006
David Cassiman; Amanda J. Barlow; Sara Vander Borght; Louis Libbrecht; Vassilis Pachnis
Developmental Biology | 2008
Jean-Marie Delalande; Amanda J. Barlow; Aaron J. Thomas; As Wallace; Nikhil Thapar; Carol A. Erickson; Alan J. Burns
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2008
Alan J. Burns; Nikhil Thapar; Amanda J. Barlow
In: (pp. p. 15). LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS (2007) | 2007
C Caldwell; Alan J. Burns; Amanda J. Barlow; Nikhil Thapar