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Dive into the research topics where Marketa Kaucka is active.

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Featured researches published by Marketa Kaucka.


Nature | 2014

Glial origin of mesenchymal stem cells in a tooth model system

Nina Kaukua; Maryam Khatibi Shahidi; Chrysoula Konstantinidou; Vyacheslav Dyachuk; Marketa Kaucka; Alessandro Furlan; Zhengwen An; Longlong Wang; Isabell Hultman; Larsa Ahrlund-Richter; Hans Blom; Hjalmar Brismar; Natalia Assaife Lopes; Vassilis Pachnis; Ueli Suter; Hans Clevers; Irma Thesleff; Paul T. Sharpe; Patrik Ernfors; Kaj Fried; Igor Adameyko

Mesenchymal stem cells occupy niches in stromal tissues where they provide sources of cells for specialized mesenchymal derivatives during growth and repair. The origins of mesenchymal stem cells have been the subject of considerable discussion, and current consensus holds that perivascular cells form mesenchymal stem cells in most tissues. The continuously growing mouse incisor tooth offers an excellent model to address the origin of mesenchymal stem cells. These stem cells dwell in a niche at the tooth apex where they produce a variety of differentiated derivatives. Cells constituting the tooth are mostly derived from two embryonic sources: neural crest ectomesenchyme and ectodermal epithelium. It has been thought for decades that the dental mesenchymal stem cells giving rise to pulp cells and odontoblasts derive from neural crest cells after their migration in the early head and formation of ectomesenchymal tissue. Here we show that a significant population of mesenchymal stem cells during development, self-renewal and repair of a tooth are derived from peripheral nerve-associated glia. Glial cells generate multipotent mesenchymal stem cells that produce pulp cells and odontoblasts. By combining a clonal colour-coding technique with tracing of peripheral glia, we provide new insights into the dynamics of tooth organogenesis and growth.


Science Advances | 2016

Analysis of neural crest–derived clones reveals novel aspects of facial development

Marketa Kaucka; Evgeny Ivashkin; Daniel Gyllborg; Tomáš Zikmund; Marketa Tesarova; Jozef Kaiser; Meng Xie; Julian Petersen; Vassilis Pachnis; Silvia K. Nicolis; Tian Yu; Paul T. Sharpe; Ernest Arenas; Hjalmar Brismar; Hans Blom; Hans Clevers; Ueli Suter; Andrei S. Chagin; Kaj Fried; Andreas Hellander; Igor Adameyko

Facial shaping results from oriented divisions and crowd movements of ectomesenchymal cells during morphogenetic events. Cranial neural crest cells populate the future facial region and produce ectomesenchyme-derived tissues, such as cartilage, bone, dermis, smooth muscle, adipocytes, and many others. However, the contribution of individual neural crest cells to certain facial locations and the general spatial clonal organization of the ectomesenchyme have not been determined. We investigated how neural crest cells give rise to clonally organized ectomesenchyme and how this early ectomesenchyme behaves during the developmental processes that shape the face. Using a combination of mouse and zebrafish models, we analyzed individual migration, cell crowd movement, oriented cell division, clonal spatial overlapping, and multilineage differentiation. The early face appears to be built from multiple spatially defined overlapping ectomesenchymal clones. During early face development, these clones remain oligopotent and generate various tissues in a given location. By combining clonal analysis, computer simulations, mouse mutants, and live imaging, we show that facial shaping results from an array of local cellular activities in the ectomesenchyme. These activities mostly involve oriented divisions and crowd movements of cells during morphogenetic events. Cellular behavior that can be recognized as individual cell migration is very limited and short-ranged and likely results from cellular mixing due to the proliferation activity of the tissue. These cellular mechanisms resemble the strategy behind limb bud morphogenesis, suggesting the possibility of common principles and deep homology between facial and limb outgrowth.


Cell Communication and Signaling | 2015

Asymmetry of VANGL2 in migrating lymphocytes as a tool to monitor activity of the mammalian WNT/planar cell polarity pathway

Marketa Kaucka; Julian Petersen; Pavlína Janovská; Tomasz Witold Radaszkiewicz; Lucie Smyčková; Avais M. Daulat; Jean-Paul Borg; Gunnar Schulte; Vítězslav Bryja

BackgroundThe WNT/planar-cell-polarity (PCP) pathway is a key regulator of cell polarity and directional cell movements. Core PCP proteins such as Van Gogh-like2 (VANGL2) are evolutionarily highly conserved; however, the mammalian PCP machinery is still poorly understood mainly due to lack of suitable models and quantitative methodology. WNT/PCP has been implicated in many human diseases with the most distinguished positive role in the metastatic process, which accounts for more than 90% of cancer related deaths, and presents therefore an attractive target for pharmacological interventions. However, cellular assays for the assessment of PCP signaling, which would allow a more detailed mechanistic analysis of PCP function and possibly also high throughput screening for chemical compounds targeting mammalian PCP signaling, are still missing.ResultsHere we describe a mammalian cell culture model, which correlates B lymphocyte migration of patient-derived MEC1 cells and asymmetric localization of fluorescently-tagged VANGL2. We show by live cell imaging that PCP proteins are polarized in MEC1 cells and that VANGL2 polarization is controlled by the same mechanism as in tissues i.e. it is dependent on casein kinase 1 activity. In addition, destruction of the actin cytoskeleton leads to migratory arrest and cell rounding while VANGL2-EGFP remains polarized suggesting that active PCP signaling visualized by polarized distribution of VANGL2 is a cause for and not a consequence of the asymmetric shape of a migrating cell.ConclusionsThe presented imaging-based methodology allows overcoming limitations of earlier approaches to study the mammalian WNT/PCP pathway, which required in vivo models and analysis of complex tissues. Our system investigating PCP-like signaling on a single-cell level thus opens new possibilities for screening of compounds, which control asymmetric distribution of proteins in the PCP pathway.


eLife | 2017

Oriented clonal cell dynamics enables accurate growth and shaping of vertebrate cartilage

Marketa Kaucka; Tomáš Zikmund; Marketa Tesarova; Daniel Gyllborg; Andreas Hellander; Josef Jaroš; Jozef Kaiser; Julian Petersen; Bara Szarowska; Phillip T. Newton; Vyacheslav Dyachuk; Lei Li; Hong Qian; Anne Johansson; Yuji Mishina; Joshua D. Currie; Elly M. Tanaka; Alek Erickson; Andrew T. Dudley; Hjalmar Brismar; Paul Southam; Enrico Coen; Min Chen; Lee S. Weinstein; Aleš Hampl; Ernest Arenas; Andrei S. Chagin; Kaj Fried; Igor Adameyko

Cartilaginous structures are at the core of embryo growth and shaping before the bone forms. Here we report a novel principle of vertebrate cartilage growth that is based on introducing transversally-oriented clones into pre-existing cartilage. This mechanism of growth uncouples the lateral expansion of curved cartilaginous sheets from the control of cartilage thickness, a process which might be the evolutionary mechanism underlying adaptations of facial shape. In rod-shaped cartilage structures (Meckel, ribs and skeletal elements in developing limbs), the transverse integration of clonal columns determines the well-defined diameter and resulting rod-like morphology. We were able to alter cartilage shape by experimentally manipulating clonal geometries. Using in silico modeling, we discovered that anisotropic proliferation might explain cartilage bending and groove formation at the macro-scale. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.25902.001


Journal of Instrumentation | 2016

Use of micro computed-tomography and 3D printing for reverse engineering of mouse embryo nasal capsule

M. Tesařová; Tomáš Zikmund; Marketa Kaucka; Igor Adameyko; Josef Jaroš; David Paloušek; D. Škaroupka; Jozef Kaiser

Imaging of increasingly complex cartilage in vertebrate embryos is one of the key tasks of developmental biology. This is especially important to study shape-organizing processes during initial skeletal formation and growth. Advanced imaging techniques that are reflecting biological needs give a powerful impulse to push the boundaries of biological visualization. Recently, techniques for contrasting tissues and organs have improved considerably, extending traditional 2D imaging approaches to 3D . X-ray micro computed tomography (μCT), which allows 3D imaging of biological objects including their internal structures with a resolution in the micrometer range, in combination with contrasting techniques seems to be the most suitable approach for non-destructive imaging of embryonic developing cartilage. Despite there are many software-based ways for visualization of 3D data sets, having a real solid model of the studied object might give novel opportunities to fully understand the shape-organizing processes in the developing body. In this feasibility study we demonstrated the full procedure of creating a real 3D object of mouse embryo nasal capsule, i.e. the staining, the μCT scanning combined by the advanced data processing and the 3D printing.


eLife | 2018

Signals from the brain and olfactory epithelium control shaping of the mammalian nasal capsule cartilage

Marketa Kaucka; Julian Petersen; Marketa Tesarova; Bara Szarowska; Maria Eleni Kastriti; Meng Xie; Anna Kicheva; Karl Annusver; Maria Kasper; Orsolya Symmons; Leslie Pan; François Spitz; Jozef Kaiser; Maria Hovorakova; Tomáš Zikmund; Kazunori Sunadome; Michael P. Matise; Hui Wang; Ulrika Marklund; Hind Abdo; Patrik Ernfors; Pascal Maire; Maud Wurmser; Andrei S. Chagin; Kaj Fried; Igor Adameyko

Facial shape is the basis for facial recognition and categorization. Facial features reflect the underlying geometry of the skeletal structures. Here, we reveal that cartilaginous nasal capsule (corresponding to upper jaw and face) is shaped by signals generated by neural structures: brain and olfactory epithelium. Brain-derived Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) enables the induction of nasal septum and posterior nasal capsule, whereas the formation of a capsule roof is controlled by signals from the olfactory epithelium. Unexpectedly, the cartilage of the nasal capsule turned out to be important for shaping membranous facial bones during development. This suggests that conserved neurosensory structures could benefit from protection and have evolved signals inducing cranial cartilages encasing them. Experiments with mutant mice revealed that the genomic regulatory regions controlling production of SHH in the nervous system contribute to facial cartilage morphogenesis, which might be a mechanism responsible for the adaptive evolution of animal faces and snouts.


Scientific Reports | 2018

A quantitative analysis of 3D-cell distribution in regenerating muscle-skeletal system with synchrotron X-ray computed microtomography

Markéta Tesařová; Lucia Mancini; András Simon; Igor Adameyko; Marketa Kaucka; Ahmed Elewa; Gabriele Lanzafame; Yi Zhang; Dominika Kalasová; Bara Szarowska; Tomáš Zikmund; Marie Novotná; Jozef Kaiser

One of the greatest enigmas of modern biology is how the geometry of muscular and skeletal structures are created and how their development is controlled during growth and regeneration. Scaling and shaping of vertebrate muscles and skeletal elements has always been enigmatic and required an advanced technical level in order to analyse the cell distribution in 3D. In this work, synchrotron X-ray computed microtomography (µCT) and chemical contrasting has been exploited for a quantitative analysis of the 3D-cell distribution in tissues of a developing salamander (Pleurodeles waltl) limb – a key model organism for vertebrate regeneration studies. We mapped the limb muscles, their size and shape as well as the number and density of cells within the extracellular matrix of the developing cartilage. By using tomographic approach, we explored the polarity of the cells in 3D, in relation to the structure of developing joints. We found that the polarity of chondrocytes correlates with the planes in joint surfaces and also changes along the length of the cartilaginous elements. Our approach generates data for the precise computer simulations of muscle-skeletal regeneration using cell dynamics models, which is necessary for the understanding how anisotropic growth results in the precise shapes of skeletal structures.


Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology | 2017

Evolution and development of the cartilaginous skull: From a lancelet towards a human face

Marketa Kaucka; Igor Adameyko

Chrondrocranium, the cartilaginous skull, is one of the major innovations that underlie evolution of the vertebrate head. Control of the induction and shaping of the cartilage is a key for the formation of the facial bones and largely defines facial shape. The appearance of cartilage in the head enabled many new functions such as protection of central nervous system and sensory structures, support of the feeding apparatus and formation of muscle attachment points ensuring faster and coordinated jaw movements. Here we review the evolution of cartilage in the cranial region and discuss shaping of the chondrocranium in different groups of vertebrates.


Experimental Cell Research | 2014

Non-canonical functions of the peripheral nerve.

Marketa Kaucka; Igor Adameyko


Journal of Instrumentation | 2018

High-contrast differentiation resolution 3D imaging of rodent brain by X-ray computed microtomography

Tomáš Zikmund; M. Novotná; M. Kavková; M. Tesařová; Marketa Kaucka; B. Szarowská; Igor Adameyko; E. Hrubá; Marcela Buchtová; E. Dražanová; Z. Starčuk; Jozef Kaiser

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Tomáš Zikmund

Central European Institute of Technology

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Jozef Kaiser

Central European Institute of Technology

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Kaj Fried

Karolinska Institutet

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Hjalmar Brismar

Royal Institute of Technology

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Marketa Tesarova

Central European Institute of Technology

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