This chapter discusses the role of cardiac neural crest cells in the formation of the septum that divides the cardiac arterial pole into separate systemic and pulmonary arteries. Further, cardiac neural crest cells directly support the normal development and patterning of derivatives of the caudal pharyngeal arches, including the great arteries, thymus, thyroid, and parathyroids. Recently, cardiac neural crest cells have also been shown to indirectly influence the development of the secondary heart field, another derivative of the caudal pharynx, by modulating signaling in the pharynx. The contribution and function of the cardiac neural crest cells has been learned in avian models; most of the genes associated with cardiac neural crest function have been identified using mouse models. Together these studies show that the neural crest cells may not only critical for normal cardiovascular development but also may be involved secondarily because they represent a major component in the complex tissue interactions in the caudal pharynx and outflow tract. Cardiac neural crest cells span from the caudal pharynx into the outflow tract, and therefore may be susceptible to any perturbation in or by other cells in these regions. Thus, understanding congenital cardiac outflow malformations in human sequences of malformations resulting from genetic and/or environmental insults necessarily requires better understanding the role of cardiac neural crest cells in cardiac development.
Keywords: 22q11.2 deletion syndrome; AP-2; Aorta; CHARGE syndrome; CNCCs; Cardiac neural crest cells; Cardiac regeneration; Conduction system; Connexin 43; DiGeorge syndrome; E-cadherin; EMT; Ectoderm; Ectomesenchymal cells; Endoderm; Endothelin-1; Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; Heart looping; Jacobsen syndrome; LEOPARD syndrome; Nervous system; Neural tube; Noonan syndrome; Outflow tract; Parathyroid gland; Patent ductus arteriosus; Pax3; Pharyngeal arch arteries; Pulmonary trunk; SOX10; SRY; Semaphorin; Snail; TWIST1; Thymus; Thyroid gland; Treacher Collins syndrome; Velocardiofacial syndrome; ZIC1.
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