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Gérard Couly

Researcher at Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

Publications -  74
Citations -  6933

Gérard Couly is an academic researcher from Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neural crest & Neural fold. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 72 publications receiving 6592 citations. Previous affiliations of Gérard Couly include Vision Institute & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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The triple origin of skull in higher vertebrates: a study in quail-chick chimeras

TL;DR: The quail-chick chimera technique is used to study the origin of the bones of the skull in the avian embryo to assign a precise embryonic origin from either the mesectoderm, the paraxial cephalic mesoderm or the five first somites, to all the bones forming theAvian skull.
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The cephalic neural crest provides pericytes and smooth muscle cells to all blood vessels of the face and forebrain.

TL;DR: It is shown that NCC-derived pericytes and smooth muscle cells are distributed in a sharply circumscribed sector of the vasculature of the avian embryo, suggesting that the vertebrate subphylum may have exploited the exceptionally broad range of developmental potentialities and the plasticity of NCCs in head remodelling that resulted in the growth of the forebrain.
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Neural crest cell plasticity and its limits

TL;DR: The neural crest (NC) yields pluripotent cells endowed with migratory properties that give rise to neurons, glia, melanocytes and endocrine cells, and to diverse `mesenchymal' derivatives.
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Interactions between Hox-negative cephalic neural crest cells and the foregut endoderm in patterning the facial skeleton in the vertebrate head.

TL;DR: The findings indicate that the endoderm instructs neural crest cells as to the size, shape and position of all the facial skeletal elements, whether they are cartilage or membrane bones.
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The developmental fate of the cephalic mesoderm in quail-chick chimeras

TL;DR: The more important result of this work was to show that the cephalic mesoderm does not form dermis, which is taken over by neural crest cells, which form both the skeleton and dermis of the face in the course of evolution of the vertebrate head.