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Multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in Nfib-deficient mice

BACKGROUND: Agenesis of the corpus callosum is associated with many human developmental syndromes. Key mechanisms regulating callosal formation include the guidance of axons arising from pioneering neurons in the cingulate cortex and the development of cortical midline glial populations, but their m...

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Autores principales: Piper, Michael, Moldrich, Randal X, Lindwall, Charlotta, Little, Erica, Barry, Guy, Mason, Sharon, Sunn, Nana, Kurniawan, Nyoman Dana, Gronostajski, Richard M, Richards, Linda J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2802587/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19961580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1749-8104-4-43
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author Piper, Michael
Moldrich, Randal X
Lindwall, Charlotta
Little, Erica
Barry, Guy
Mason, Sharon
Sunn, Nana
Kurniawan, Nyoman Dana
Gronostajski, Richard M
Richards, Linda J
author_facet Piper, Michael
Moldrich, Randal X
Lindwall, Charlotta
Little, Erica
Barry, Guy
Mason, Sharon
Sunn, Nana
Kurniawan, Nyoman Dana
Gronostajski, Richard M
Richards, Linda J
author_sort Piper, Michael
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Agenesis of the corpus callosum is associated with many human developmental syndromes. Key mechanisms regulating callosal formation include the guidance of axons arising from pioneering neurons in the cingulate cortex and the development of cortical midline glial populations, but their molecular regulation remains poorly characterised. Recent data have shown that mice lacking the transcription factor Nfib exhibit callosal agenesis, yet neocortical callosal neurons express only low levels of Nfib. Therefore, we investigate here how Nfib functions to regulate non-cell-autonomous mechanisms of callosal formation. RESULTS: Our investigations confirmed a reduction in glial cells at the midline in Nfib(-/- )mice. To determine how this occurs, we examined radial progenitors at the cortical midline and found that they were specified correctly in Nfib mutant mice, but did not differentiate into mature glia. Cellular proliferation and apoptosis occurred normally at the midline of Nfib mutant mice, indicating that the decrease in midline glia observed was due to deficits in differentiation rather than proliferation or apoptosis. Next we investigated the development of callosal pioneering axons in Nfib(-/- )mice. Using retrograde tracer labelling, we found that Nfib is expressed in cingulate neurons and hence may regulate their development. In Nfib(-/- )mice, neuropilin 1-positive axons fail to cross the midline and expression of neuropilin 1 is diminished. Tract tracing and immunohistochemistry further revealed that, in late gestation, a minor population of neocortical axons does cross the midline in Nfib mutants on a C57Bl/6J background, forming a rudimentary corpus callosum. Finally, the development of other forebrain commissures in Nfib-deficient mice is also aberrant. CONCLUSION: The formation of the corpus callosum is severely delayed in the absence of Nfib, despite Nfib not being highly expressed in neocortical callosal neurons. Our results indicate that in addition to regulating the development of midline glial populations, Nfib also regulates the expression of neuropilin 1 within the cingulate cortex. Collectively, these data indicate that defects in midline glia and cingulate cortex neurons are associated with the callosal dysgenesis seen in Nfib-deficient mice, and provide insight into how the development of these cellular populations is controlled at a molecular level.
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spelling pubmed-28025872010-01-07 Multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in Nfib-deficient mice Piper, Michael Moldrich, Randal X Lindwall, Charlotta Little, Erica Barry, Guy Mason, Sharon Sunn, Nana Kurniawan, Nyoman Dana Gronostajski, Richard M Richards, Linda J Neural Dev Research article BACKGROUND: Agenesis of the corpus callosum is associated with many human developmental syndromes. Key mechanisms regulating callosal formation include the guidance of axons arising from pioneering neurons in the cingulate cortex and the development of cortical midline glial populations, but their molecular regulation remains poorly characterised. Recent data have shown that mice lacking the transcription factor Nfib exhibit callosal agenesis, yet neocortical callosal neurons express only low levels of Nfib. Therefore, we investigate here how Nfib functions to regulate non-cell-autonomous mechanisms of callosal formation. RESULTS: Our investigations confirmed a reduction in glial cells at the midline in Nfib(-/- )mice. To determine how this occurs, we examined radial progenitors at the cortical midline and found that they were specified correctly in Nfib mutant mice, but did not differentiate into mature glia. Cellular proliferation and apoptosis occurred normally at the midline of Nfib mutant mice, indicating that the decrease in midline glia observed was due to deficits in differentiation rather than proliferation or apoptosis. Next we investigated the development of callosal pioneering axons in Nfib(-/- )mice. Using retrograde tracer labelling, we found that Nfib is expressed in cingulate neurons and hence may regulate their development. In Nfib(-/- )mice, neuropilin 1-positive axons fail to cross the midline and expression of neuropilin 1 is diminished. Tract tracing and immunohistochemistry further revealed that, in late gestation, a minor population of neocortical axons does cross the midline in Nfib mutants on a C57Bl/6J background, forming a rudimentary corpus callosum. Finally, the development of other forebrain commissures in Nfib-deficient mice is also aberrant. CONCLUSION: The formation of the corpus callosum is severely delayed in the absence of Nfib, despite Nfib not being highly expressed in neocortical callosal neurons. Our results indicate that in addition to regulating the development of midline glial populations, Nfib also regulates the expression of neuropilin 1 within the cingulate cortex. Collectively, these data indicate that defects in midline glia and cingulate cortex neurons are associated with the callosal dysgenesis seen in Nfib-deficient mice, and provide insight into how the development of these cellular populations is controlled at a molecular level. BioMed Central 2009-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2802587/ /pubmed/19961580 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1749-8104-4-43 Text en Copyright ©2009 Piper et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Piper, Michael
Moldrich, Randal X
Lindwall, Charlotta
Little, Erica
Barry, Guy
Mason, Sharon
Sunn, Nana
Kurniawan, Nyoman Dana
Gronostajski, Richard M
Richards, Linda J
Multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in Nfib-deficient mice
title Multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in Nfib-deficient mice
title_full Multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in Nfib-deficient mice
title_fullStr Multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in Nfib-deficient mice
title_full_unstemmed Multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in Nfib-deficient mice
title_short Multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in Nfib-deficient mice
title_sort multiple non-cell-autonomous defects underlie neocortical callosal dysgenesis in nfib-deficient mice
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2802587/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19961580
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1749-8104-4-43
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