Neuroectoderm

Neuroectoderm (or neural ectoderm or neural tube epithelium) is the term for ectoderm which receives Bone Morphogenetic Protein-inhibiting signals from proteins such as noggin, which leads to the development of the nervous system from this tissue.

After recruitment from the ectoderm, the neurectoderm undergoes three stages of development: transformation into the neural plate, transformation into the neural groove (with associated neural folds), and transformation into the neural tube. After formation of the tube, the brain forms into three sections; the hindbrain, the midbrain, and the forebrain.

The types of neuroectoderm include:


 * Neural crest
 * pigment cells in the skin
 * ganglia of the autonomic nervous system
 * dorsal root ganglia.
 * facial cartilage
 * spiral septum of developing heart
 * ciliary body of the eye
 * adrenal medulla


 * Neural tube
 * brain (rhombencephalon, mesencephalon and prosencephalon)
 * spinal cord and motor neurons
 * retina
 * posterior pituitary