| Literature DB >> 24027496 |
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are involved in crucial steps of neurogenesis, neural differentiation, and neuronal plasticity. Here we review experimental evidence suggesting that miRNAs may regulate the histogenesis of the cerebral cortex and neural retina. Both cortical and retinal early progenitor cells are multipotent, that is, they can generate different types of cortical or retinal cells, respectively, in one lineage. In both cortical and retinal development, the precise timing of activation of cell fate transcription factors results in a stereotyped schedule of generation of the different types of neurons. Emerging evidence indicates that miRNAs may play an important role in regulating such temporal programing of neuronal differentiation. Neuronal subtypes of the cortex and retina exhibit distinct miRNA signatures, implying that miRNA codes may be used to specify different types of neurons. Interfering with global miRNA activity changes the ratio of the different types of neurons produced. In fact, there are examples of cell fate genes that are regulated at the translational level, both in retinogenesis and in corticogenesis. A model depicting how miRNAs might orchestrate both the type and the birth of different neurons is presented and discussed. Glossary. • Lineage: the temporally ordered cell progeny of an individual progenitor cell. • Specification: the (reversible) process by which a cell becomes capable of, and biased toward, a particular fate. • Commitment: the process by which cell fate is fully determined and can no longer be affected by external cues. • Potency: the entire complement of cells that a progenitor can ultimately produce. • Multipotency: the ability to give rise to more than one cell type. • Progenitor: a dividing cell that, in contrast to a stem cell, cannot proliferate indefinitely. • Antago-miR: modified antisense oligonucleotide that blocks the activity of a miRNA. • Heterochronic neuron: type of neurons that is generated at inappropriate times of development. • Neuron birth date: the time of the last mitosis of a neuronal cell.Entities:
Keywords: cell birth date; cell-fate; cortex; development; heterochronic; retina; timing
Year: 2013 PMID: 24027496 PMCID: PMC3760135 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2013.00141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Dicer-CKO phenotypes in the cortex and retina.
| Cre transgene | Cre expression | Main phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foxg1-Cre | From E8 in most forebrain cells | Altered balance of apical and basal progenitors | |
| Emx1-Cre | From E10 to E10.5 in most cells of the dorsal telencephalon | Overproduction of early-born neurons and reduced number of Brn1-expressing upper-layer neurons | |
| Nestin-Cre | From E10 to E10.5 in forebrain stem cells and progenitors | Affected late-born neuron generation and migration | |
| CamKII-Cre | From E15.5 in post-mitotic neurons of the cortex and hippocampus | Normal layering; reduced dendritic branch elaboration | |
| Chx10-Cre | Mosaic pattern, from E14.5 in progenitors of all retinal layers | Decreased ERG responses, retinal disorganization, progressive retinal degeneration from P16 |
|
| αPax6-Cre | Peripheral retina from day E10.5; differentiated amacrine cells, by E14.5 | Overproduction of ganglion cells, failure to generate late cell types such as Müller glia and rod photoreceptors | |
| Dkk3-Cre | From E10.5 in progenitors of all neuroretinal cell types | Microphthalmia, massive apoptosis | |
| Rx-Cre | Ubiquitously in the developing neuroretina and optic stalk; later in the optic chiasm | Microphthalmia, massive apoptosis, defects in retinal ganglion cell axon pathfinding |