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Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons

Cortical inhibitory circuits are formed by GABAergic interneurons, a cell population that originates far from the cerebral cortex in the embryonic ventral forebrain. Given their distant developmental origins, it is intriguing how the number of cortical interneurons is ultimately determined. One poss...

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Autores principales: Southwell, Derek G., Paredes, Mercedes F., Galvao, Rui P., Jones, Daniel L., Froemke, Robert C., Sebe, Joy Y., Alfaro-Cervello, Clara, Tang, Yunshuo, Garcia-Verdugo, Jose M., Rubenstein, John L., Baraban, Scott C., Alvarez-Buylla, Arturo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3726009/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23041929
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11523
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author Southwell, Derek G.
Paredes, Mercedes F.
Galvao, Rui P.
Jones, Daniel L.
Froemke, Robert C.
Sebe, Joy Y.
Alfaro-Cervello, Clara
Tang, Yunshuo
Garcia-Verdugo, Jose M.
Rubenstein, John L.
Baraban, Scott C.
Alvarez-Buylla, Arturo
author_facet Southwell, Derek G.
Paredes, Mercedes F.
Galvao, Rui P.
Jones, Daniel L.
Froemke, Robert C.
Sebe, Joy Y.
Alfaro-Cervello, Clara
Tang, Yunshuo
Garcia-Verdugo, Jose M.
Rubenstein, John L.
Baraban, Scott C.
Alvarez-Buylla, Arturo
author_sort Southwell, Derek G.
collection PubMed
description Cortical inhibitory circuits are formed by GABAergic interneurons, a cell population that originates far from the cerebral cortex in the embryonic ventral forebrain. Given their distant developmental origins, it is intriguing how the number of cortical interneurons is ultimately determined. One possibility, suggested by the neurotrophic hypothesis(1-5), is that cortical interneurons are overproduced, and then following their migration into cortex, excess interneurons are eliminated through a competition for extrinsically derived trophic signals. Here we have characterized the developmental cell death of mouse cortical interneurons in vivo, in vitro, and following transplantation. We found that 40% of developing cortical interneurons were eliminated through Bax- (Bcl-2 associated X-) dependent apoptosis during postnatal life. When cultured in vitro or transplanted into the cortex, interneuron precursors died at a cellular age similar to that at which endogenous interneurons died during normal development. Remarkably, over transplant sizes that varied 200-fold, a constant fraction of the transplanted population underwent cell death. The death of transplanted neurons was not affected by the cell-autonomous disruption of TrkB (tropomyosin kinase receptor B), the main neurotrophin receptor expressed by central nervous system (CNS) neurons(6-8). Transplantation expanded the cortical interneuron population by up to 35%, but the frequency of inhibitory synaptic events did not scale with the number of transplanted interneurons. Together, our findings indicate that interneuron cell death is intrinsically determined, either cell-autonomously, or through a population-autonomous competition for survival signals derived from other interneurons.
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spelling pubmed-37260092013-07-29 Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons Southwell, Derek G. Paredes, Mercedes F. Galvao, Rui P. Jones, Daniel L. Froemke, Robert C. Sebe, Joy Y. Alfaro-Cervello, Clara Tang, Yunshuo Garcia-Verdugo, Jose M. Rubenstein, John L. Baraban, Scott C. Alvarez-Buylla, Arturo Nature Article Cortical inhibitory circuits are formed by GABAergic interneurons, a cell population that originates far from the cerebral cortex in the embryonic ventral forebrain. Given their distant developmental origins, it is intriguing how the number of cortical interneurons is ultimately determined. One possibility, suggested by the neurotrophic hypothesis(1-5), is that cortical interneurons are overproduced, and then following their migration into cortex, excess interneurons are eliminated through a competition for extrinsically derived trophic signals. Here we have characterized the developmental cell death of mouse cortical interneurons in vivo, in vitro, and following transplantation. We found that 40% of developing cortical interneurons were eliminated through Bax- (Bcl-2 associated X-) dependent apoptosis during postnatal life. When cultured in vitro or transplanted into the cortex, interneuron precursors died at a cellular age similar to that at which endogenous interneurons died during normal development. Remarkably, over transplant sizes that varied 200-fold, a constant fraction of the transplanted population underwent cell death. The death of transplanted neurons was not affected by the cell-autonomous disruption of TrkB (tropomyosin kinase receptor B), the main neurotrophin receptor expressed by central nervous system (CNS) neurons(6-8). Transplantation expanded the cortical interneuron population by up to 35%, but the frequency of inhibitory synaptic events did not scale with the number of transplanted interneurons. Together, our findings indicate that interneuron cell death is intrinsically determined, either cell-autonomously, or through a population-autonomous competition for survival signals derived from other interneurons. 2012-10-07 2012-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3726009/ /pubmed/23041929 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11523 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Southwell, Derek G.
Paredes, Mercedes F.
Galvao, Rui P.
Jones, Daniel L.
Froemke, Robert C.
Sebe, Joy Y.
Alfaro-Cervello, Clara
Tang, Yunshuo
Garcia-Verdugo, Jose M.
Rubenstein, John L.
Baraban, Scott C.
Alvarez-Buylla, Arturo
Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons
title Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons
title_full Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons
title_fullStr Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons
title_full_unstemmed Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons
title_short Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons
title_sort intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3726009/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23041929
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11523
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