Literature DB >> 25762681

Endogenous gradients of resting potential instructively pattern embryonic neural tissue via Notch signaling and regulation of proliferation.

Vaibhav P Pai1, Joan M Lemire1, Jean-François Paré1, Gufa Lin2, Ying Chen2, Michael Levin3.   

Abstract

Biophysical forces play important roles throughout embryogenesis, but the roles of spatial differences in cellular resting potentials during large-scale brain morphogenesis remain unknown. Here, we implicate endogenous bioelectricity as an instructive factor during brain patterning in Xenopus laevis. Early frog embryos exhibit a characteristic hyperpolarization of cells lining the neural tube; disruption of this spatial gradient of the transmembrane potential (Vmem) diminishes or eliminates the expression of early brain markers, and causes anatomical mispatterning of the brain, including absent or malformed regions. This effect is mediated by voltage-gated calcium signaling and gap-junctional communication. In addition to cell-autonomous effects, we show that hyperpolarization of transmembrane potential (Vmem) in ventral cells outside the brain induces upregulation of neural cell proliferation at long range. Misexpression of the constitutively active form of Notch, a suppressor of neural induction, impairs the normal hyperpolarization pattern and neural patterning; forced hyperpolarization by misexpression of specific ion channels rescues brain defects induced by activated Notch signaling. Strikingly, hyperpolarizing posterior or ventral cells induces the production of ectopic neural tissue considerably outside the neural field. The hyperpolarization signal also synergizes with canonical reprogramming factors (POU and HB4), directing undifferentiated cells toward neural fate in vivo. These data identify a new functional role for bioelectric signaling in brain patterning, reveal interactions between Vmem and key biochemical pathways (Notch and Ca(2+) signaling) as the molecular mechanism by which spatial differences of Vmem regulate organogenesis of the vertebrate brain, and suggest voltage modulation as a tractable strategy for intervention in certain classes of birth defects.
Copyright © 2015 the authors 0270-6474/15/354366-20$15.00/0.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bioelectricity; brain morphogenesis; long range; proliferation; resting potential

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25762681      PMCID: PMC4355204          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1877-14.2015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  118 in total

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4.  Effects of retinoic acid upon eye field morphogenesis and differentiation.

Authors:  G W Eagleson; L J Johnson-Meeter; J Frideres
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8.  Otx2 and Gbx2 are required for refinement and not induction of mid-hindbrain gene expression.

Authors:  J Y Li; A L Joyner
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10.  Expression of a dominant negative inhibitor of intercellular communication in the early Xenopus embryo causes delamination and extrusion of cells.

Authors:  D L Paul; K Yu; R Bruzzone; R L Gimlich; D A Goodenough
Journal:  Development       Date:  1995-02       Impact factor: 6.868

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  45 in total

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4.  Ablation of Newly Generated Hippocampal Granule Cells Has Disease-Modifying Effects in Epilepsy.

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5.  Preventing Ethanol-Induced Brain and Eye Morphology Defects Using Optogenetics.

Authors:  Vaibhav P Pai; Dany Spencer Adams
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7.  Ion channel signaling influences cellular proliferation and phagocyte activity during axolotl tail regeneration.

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Review 9.  Calcium signaling in skeletal muscle development, maintenance and regeneration.

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10.  Toward Decoding Bioelectric Events in Xenopus Embryogenesis: New Methodology for Tracking Interplay Between Calcium and Resting Potentials In Vivo.

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