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Institution

Collège de France

EducationParis, France
About: Collège de France is a education organization based out in Paris, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Dopamine. The organization has 6541 authors who have published 11983 publications receiving 648742 citations. The organization is also known as: College de France.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It appears that the cephalic neural crest is particularly important in the formation of the facial part of the skull, while the vault and dorsal part are mesodermal and cartilages and bones found in the intermediary region are of mixed origin.
Abstract: The differentiation of cephalic neural crest cells into skeletal tissue in birds has been observed using the quail —chick nuclear marking system, which is based on specific differences in the distribution of the nuclear DNA. Chimaeras were formed by replacing a fragment of cephalic neural primordium of a 2- to 12-somite chicken embryo by the corresponding fragment isolated from an equivalent quail embryo. The participation of the graft-derived cells in the formation of the skull of these embryos was studied on histological sections after Feulgen and Rossenbeck staining. Cells from the pirosencephalic neural crest migrate into the frontal nasal process and mix with the mesencephalic neural crest cells in the lateral nasal processes, around the optic cupule and beneath the diencephalon. In addition, the mesencephalic neural crest cells form the bulk of the mesenchyme of the maxillary processes and mandibular arch, whereas the rhombencephalic neural crest cells become located in the branchial arches. The origin of cartilages of the chondrocranium and bones of the neurocranium and viscerocranium has been shown in the chimaeric embryos: the basal plate cartilages, occipital bones, sphenoid bones and the cranial vault are mainly of mesodermal origin. However some parts have a dual origin: rhombo-mesencephalic neural crest cells are found in the otic capsule, and the frontal bone, the rostrum of parasphenoid and the orbital cartilages contain diverse amounts of prosencephalo-mesencephalic neural crest cells. The squamosals and the columella auris are formed from mesectodermic cells as are the nasal skeleton, the palatines and the maxillar bones. The mesectodermal origin of mandibular and hyoid bones and cartilages was already known. From these results it appears that the cephalic neural crest is particularly important in the formation of the facial part of the skull, while the vault and dorsal part are mesodermal and cartilages and bones found in the intermediary region are of mixed origin. The presence of mixed structures implies that the mesoderm and the mesectoderm are equally competent towards the specific inducers of these bones and cartilages. This correlates with the equivalence in differentiation capacities already shown for cephalic mesodeimal and mesectodermal mesenchymes.

242 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is pointed out that the search for survival and proliferation factors acting locally on neural crest derivatives when they are wandering and/or settling in various embryonic locations constitutes the new challenge for further understanding their complex patterning and the highly diversified variety of their phenotypes.

242 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
03 Nov 2011-Langmuir
TL;DR: This work proposes a broad reaction scheme and shows that, through HTC, it is possible to tune the furan-to-arene ratio composing the aromatic core of the produced HTC carbons, which is not possible if calcination is used alone, in the temperature range below 350 °C.
Abstract: The objective of this paper is to better describe the structure of the hydrothermal carbon (HTC) process and put it in relationship with the more classical pyrolytic carbons. Indeed, despite the low energetic impact and the number of applications described so far for HTC, very little is known about the structure, reaction mechanism, and the way these materials relate to coals. Are HTC and calcination processes equivalent? Are the structures of the processed materials related to each other in any way? Which is the extent of polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) inside HTC? In this work, the effect of hydrothermal treatment and pyrolysis are compared on glucose, a good model carbohydrate; a detailed single-quantum double-quantum (SQ-DQ) solid state 13C NMR study of the HTC and calcined HTC is used to interpret the spectral region corresponding to the signal of furanic and arene groups. These data are compared to the spectroscopic signatures of calcined glucose, starch, and xylose. A semiquantitative analysis of t...

241 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that before any infection, CF airways are in a proinflammatory state, and after infection, the basal inflammatory imbalance contributes to exert severe damage to the mucosa, paving the way for bacterial colonization and subsequent steps of CF airway disease.
Abstract: Exacerbated inflammation is now recognized as an important component of cystic fibrosis (CF) airway disease. Whether inflammation is part of the basic defect in CF or a response to persistent infection remains controversial. We addressed this question using human fetal tracheal grafts in severe combined immunodeficient mice. This model yields histologically mature, and most importantly, naive CF and non-CF surrogate airways. Significant inflammatory imbalance was found in naive CF airway grafts, including a highly increased intraluminal interleukin 8 content (CF: 10.1 ± 2.2 ng/ml; non-CF: 1.2 ± 0.6 ng/ml; P < 0.05) and consistent accumulation of leukocytes in the subepithelial region (P < 0.001). CF airway grafts were not histologically affected until challenged with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which provoked: (1) early (before 3 h) and massive leukocyte transepithelial migration, (2) intense epithelial exfoliation, and (3) rapid progression of bacteria toward the lamina propria. In non-CF grafts, these three...

241 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the neurons that originate from migrating neural crest cells, the immunoreactivities of peripherin and of NF-L become apparent only when they have reached their destination, and the results demonstrate that peripherin is expressed more widely than has been previously observed.
Abstract: The expression of peripherin, an intermediate filament protein, had been shown by biochemical methods to be localized in the neurons of the PNS Using immunohistochemical methods, we analyzed this expression more extensively during the development of the rat and compared it with that of the low-molecular-mass neurofilament protein (NF-L), which is expressed in every neuron of the CNS and PNS The immunoreactivity of NF-L is first apparent at the 25-somite stage (about 11 d) in the ventral horn of the spinal medulla and in the posterior part of the rhombencephalon The immunoreactivity of peripherin appears subsequently, first colocalized with that of NF-L Both immunoreactivities then spread out along rostral and caudal directions, but whereas the immunoreactivity of NF-L finally becomes noticeable in every part of the nervous system, that of peripherin remains localized to (1) the motoneurons of the ventral horn of the spinal medulla; (2) the autonomic ganglionic and preganglionic neurons; and (3) the sensory neurons These results demonstrate that, in the neurons that originate from migrating neural crest cells, the immunoreactivities of peripherin and of NF-L become apparent only when they have reached their destination The results also show that peripherin is expressed more widely than has been previously observed and that this protein occurs in neuronal populations from different lineages (neural tube, neural crest, placodes) with different functions (motoneurons, sensory and autonomic neurons) The common point of these neurons is that they all have axons lying, at least partly, at the outside of the axis constituted by the encephalon and the spinal medulla; this suggests that peripherin might play a role in the recognition of the axonal pathway through the intermediary of membrane proteins

241 citations


Authors

Showing all 6597 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Pierre Chambon211884161565
Irving L. Weissman2011141172504
David R. Williams1782034138789
Kari Alitalo174817114231
Pierre Bourdieu153592194586
Stanislas Dehaene14945686539
Howard L. Weiner144104791424
Alain Fischer14377081680
Yves Agid14166974441
Michel Foucault140499191296
Jean-Pierre Changeux13867276462
Jean-Marie Tarascon136853137673
K. Ganga13227299004
Jacques Delabrouille13135494923
G. Patanchon12824187233
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20238
202293
2021418
2020429
2019385
2018391