Anterior-posterior axis formation in the mouse embryo requires the active migration of the DVE cell population at E5.5. While intracellular Ca2+ signaling has been shown to control cell migration in multiple cell contexts, it is unknown whether it is required for DVE migration. The pattern of Ca2+ activity in the mouse embryo at early peri-implantation stages is also unknown. Using the GCaMP6f Ca2+ reporter line, we performed a detailed assessment of Ca2+ dynamics between E0.5 and E5.5 using live imaging. We find that prior to implantation, Ca2+ transients are rare, but at E5.5 widespread, periodic, Ca2+ transients in extraembryonic tissues can be observed, including in the VE and ExE. In contrast, cells of the E5.5 epiblast remain relatively quiescent but show sporadic large-scale multicellular waves. Inhibition of SERCA at E5.5 abolishes Ca2+ transients and leads to DVE arrest, indicative that these transients are required for axial patterning. Together, these results reveal the pattern of Ca2+ handling in the early mouse embryo and a novel requirement in anterior-posterior axis formation.
Journal article
2025-10-01T00:00:00+00:00
23
DPAG, Institute of Developmental and Regenerative Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Germ Layers, Animals, Mice, Calcium, Cell Movement, Calcium Signaling, Body Patterning, Embryonic Development, Female, Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium-Transporting ATPases, Embryo, Mammalian