Neural crest development and disorders: from patient to model system and back again – the NEUcrest conference
Marco Antonaci, Amy Kerr, Merin Lawrence, Francesca Lorenzini, Nitin Narwade, Chloé Paka, Anna Magdalena Wulf

TL;DR
A conference brought together researchers to discuss the development and disorders of neural crest cells, aiming to understand these cells better and improve treatment for related diseases.
Contribution
The conference provided a platform for interdisciplinary collaboration and highlighted new advances in neural crest and neurocristopathy research.
Findings
The conference covered topics from NC induction to migration and differentiation.
It emphasized NCPs associated with each developmental step.
A round table and patient talk were included to shape future research directions.
Abstract
The neural crest (NC) is an embryonic multipotent and transitory population of cells that appears during late gastrulation/early neurulation in the developing embryos of vertebrate organisms. Often called “the fourth germ layer”, the NC is characterised by incredible mobility, which allows the NC cells to migrate throughout the whole embryo, giving rise to an astonishing number of different derivatives in the adult organism, such as craniofacial skeleton, adrenal gland, enteric nervous system and melanocytes. Because of these properties, neurocristopathies (NCPs), which is the term used to classify genetic diseases associated with NC developmental defects, are often syndromic and, taken all together, are the most common type of genetic disease. The NEUcrest consortium is an EU funded innovative training network (ITN) that aims to study the NC and NCPs. In March 2024, the early stage…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsCraniofacial Disorders and Treatments · Hedgehog Signaling Pathway Studies · Fetal and Pediatric Neurological Disorders
