| Literature DB >> 25705175 |
Roberta Azzarelli1, François Guillemot2, Emilie Pacary3.
Abstract
The mammalian cerebral cortex contains a high variety of neuronal subtypes that acquire precise spatial locations and form long or short-range connections to establish functional neuronal circuits. During embryonic development, cortical projection neurons are generated in the areas lining the lateral ventricles and they subsequently undergo radial migration to reach the position of their final maturation within the cortical plate. The control of the neuroblast migratory behavior and the coordination of the migration process with other neurogenic events such as cell cycle exit, differentiation and final maturation are crucial to normal brain development. Among the key regulators of cortical neuron migration, the small GTP binding proteins of the Rho family and the atypical Rnd members play important roles in integrating intracellular signaling pathways into changes in cytoskeletal dynamics and motility behavior. Here we review the role of Rnd proteins during cortical neuronal migration and we discuss both the upstream mechanisms that regulate Rnd protein activity and the downstream molecular pathways that mediate Rnd effects on cell cytoskeleton.Entities:
Keywords: Plexin; Rho GTPases; Rnd; cortical development; neuronal migration
Year: 2015 PMID: 25705175 PMCID: PMC4319381 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2015.00019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Modes of migration in the cortex. (A) Interkinetic nuclear migration. The nuclei of neuroepithelial cells or radial glia cells occupy different positions along the apical-basal axis depending on the phase of the cell cycle (see text for details). (B) Somal translocation of early-born cortical neurons. Newborn neurons lose their apical attachment and reach the PP by translocation of the soma and progressive shortening of the basal process. (C) Glia-guided radial migration of cortical neurons. Four phases of radial migration can be distinguished. Newborn neurons leave the proliferative areas (I) and reach the SVZ/IZ, where they acquire a multipolar morphology (II). After pausing in the SVZ/IZ, cells migrate toward the CP, using locomotion (III). At the end of their migration, cortical neurons switch to soma translocation (IV). MZ, marginal zone; CP, cortical plate; PP, preplate; IZ, intermediate zone; SVZ, subventricular zone; VZ, ventricular zone.
Members of the Ras superfamily and their major functions.
| Ras | Ha-Ras, K-Ras, N-Ras, R-Ras, M-Ras, RalA, RalB, Rap1A, Rap1B, Rap2A, TC21, Rit, Rin, Rad, Kir/Gem, Rheb, KB-Ras1, KB-Ras2 | Control of cell proliferation |
| Rho | RhoA, RhoB, RhoC, RhoD, Rif (RhoF), Rnd1 (Rho6), Rnd2 (Rho7, RhoN), Rnd3 (Rho8, RhoE), TTF (RhoH), Rac1, Rac2, Rac3, RhoG, Cdc42, TC10 (RhoQ), TCL (RhoJ), Wrch1 (RhoV), Chp/Wrch2 (RhoU), RhoBTB1, RhoBTB2 | Control of cell cytoskeleton |
| Rab | Rab proteins from Rab1 to Rab33 | Control of vesicle trafficking |
| Arf | Arf1, Arf2, Arf3, Arf4, Arf5, Arf6, Sar1a, Sar1b, Arl1, Arl2, Arl3, Arl4, Arl5, Arl6, Arl7, Ard1 | Control of vesicle formation |
| Ran | Ran | Control of nuclear transport |
Figure 2Rho GTPases. (A) Phylogenetic tree based on alignment of the aminoacid sequences of the 20 Rho GTPases. Rnd proteins form a distinct branch, which is closely related to Rho members. (B) Classical Rho GTPases cycle between an inactive GDP-bound state and an active GTP-bound state. In their active conformation they transduce the signal to intracellular effectors. Two classes of molecules promote the regulatory cycle: GEFs stimulate the exchange of GDP with GTP, whereas GAPs stimulates the GTP hydrolysis.
Figure 3Effect of Schematic representation of cortical radial migration in control condition. Newborn projection neurons undergo sequential steps of radial migration, which are characterized by distinct morphologies. At mid-end corticogenesis most of the neurons have reached the CP. Only few cells are still migrating and they exhibit multipolar morphology in the IZ and bipolar shape in the CP. (B) shRNA-mediated loss of function of Rnd2 expression in the embryonic cortex produces an accumulation in the IZ of multipolar cells, which exhibit more and longer neuronal processes. (C) Rnd3 knock down in the embryonic cortex interferes with the locomotion phase of migration in the CP. Rnd3-silenced neurons exhibit abnormal morphologies characterized by excessively enlarged and branched leading processes and by thin processes protruding from the cell body. MZ, marginal zone; CP, cortical plate; IZ, intermediate zone; SVZ, subventricular zone; VZ, ventricular zone.
Mechanisms regulating Rnd expression.
| Rnd2 | Neurog2 | Cortical neurons | Migration | 1 |
| Rnd2 | RP58* | Cortical neurons | Migration | 2 |
| Rnd2 | COUPTFI* | Cortical neurons | Migration and differentiation | 3 |
| Rnd2 | Scratch2* | Cortical neurons | Migration | 4 |
| Rnd3 | Ascl1 | Cortical neurons | Migration | 5 |
| Rnd3 | PDGF | Fibroblast | Formation of stress fibers | 6 |
| Rnd3 | HGF | MDCK | Motility | 7, 8 |
| Rnd3 | Raf-MEK-BRF | MDCK | Transformation | 9 |
| Melanoma cells | Invasiveness | 10, 11 | ||
| Rnd3 | p53—chemoterapeutic agent or irradiation | Cancer cell line, keratinocytes | Pro-survival | 12, 13 |
| Rnd3 | mTOR | Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma | Potential contribution to tumorigenesis | 14 |
| Rnd3 | NF-kB | Prostate cancer | Potential contribution to tumorigenesis | 15 |
| Rnd2/3 | MDMA and cocaine | Neurons in different brain regions | Potential contribution to dendritic branching and neurite outgrowth | 16 |
| Rnd3 | mir200c mir200b* | Breast cancer cell | Invasive behavior | 17, 18 |
| Rnd1-2-3 | Estradiol | Smooth muscle cells—myometrium | Decreased contraction | 19 |
| Rnd3 | Estradiol* | Prostatic stromal cells | Unknown | 20 |
| Rnd3 | MIC-1/GDF15 | Prostate cancer cells | Decreased adhesion | 21 |
| Rnd3 | CREB | Hippocampal neurons | BDNF-mediated synaptogenesis | 22 |
| Rnd3 | HIF1a | Gastric cancer cells | Epithelial to mesenchymal transition and invasion | 23 |
| Rnd3 | FOXD3* | Melanoma cells | Migration and invasion | 24 |
1 (Heng et al., .
Figure 4Modes of RhoA activity regulation by Rnd3. (A) Rnd3 interacts with p190RhoGAP and promotes its activity of RhoA inactivation. (B) Rnd3 indirectly inhibits RhoA signaling, by blocking the RhoA downstream effector ROCKI. (C) Rnd3 inhibits a RhoA activator like Syx. (D) PlexinB2 interaction with Rnd3 disrupts Rnd3-p190RhoGAP binding, which lifts RhoA inhibition. In addition PlexinB2 directly activates RhoA via recruitment of RhoGEFs (not shown).
Rnd interacting partners and their functions.
| p190RhoGAP | Rnd1 | Down-regulation of RhoA in stress fiber collapse and during cortical neuron migration | 1, 2, 3, 4 |
| Rnd2 | |||
| Rnd3 | |||
| ROCKI | Rnd3 | Inhibition of ROCKI signaling in stress fiber disassembly; control of Rnd localization and stability through phosphorylation | 5, 6 |
| Syx | Rnd3 | Down-regulation of RhoA in Zebrafish gastrulation | 7 |
| MgcRacGAP | Rnd2 | Regulation of RhoGTPase flux during cytokinesis; control of male germ cell development | 8, 9 |
| PlexinB2 | Rnd3 | Regulation of neuronal migration by fine-tuning RhoA signaling | 4 |
| PlexinB1 | Rnd1 | Activation of RhoA and down-regulation of R-Ras in growth cone collapse | 10, 11 |
| PlexinD1 | Rnd2 | Down-regulation of R-Ras in axon outgrowth inhibition | 12 |
| PlexinA1 | Rnd1 | Activation of Rac1 and down-regulation of R-Ras in axonal repulsion | 13, 14, 15 |
| Rapostilin | Rnd2 | Regulation of endocystosis and membrane invagination in neurite branching and spine formation | 16, 17 |
| Vps4A | Rnd2 | Regulation of endosomal trafficking | 18 |
| FLRT3 | Rnd1 | Control of cadherin-mediated adhesion during Xenopus gastrulation | 19, 20 |
| Pragmin | Rnd2 | Activation of RhoA in neurite outgrowth inhibition | 21 |
| SCG10 | Rnd1 | Control of microtubule stability in axon formation | 22 |
| Socius | Rnd1 | Loss of stress fibers | 23 |
| FSR2a/b | Rnd1 | Control of neurite extension downstream of FGF signaling | 24 |
| Grb7 | Rnd1 | Possible role in migration/invasion | 25 |
| STI1 | Rnd1 | Control of cytoskeletal collapse | 26 |
1 (Foster et al., .