| Literature DB >> 27806288 |
David Ohayon1, Alain Garcès2, Willy Joly2, Chadi Soukkarieh3, Tsuyoshi Takagi4, Jean-Charles Sabourin2, Eric Agius5, Douglas S Darling6, Pascal De Santa Barbara7, Yujiro Higashi4, Claus C Stolt8, Jean-Philippe Hugnot2, William D Richardson9, Patrick Carroll2, Alexandre Pattyn10.
Abstract
During spinal cord development, astrocyte precursors arise from neuroepithelial progenitors, delaminate from the ventricular zone, and migrate toward their final locations where they differentiate. Although the mechanisms underlying their early specification and late differentiation are being deciphered, less is known about the temporal control of their migration. Here, we show that the epithelial-mesenchymal transition regulator Zeb1 is expressed in glial precursors and report that loss of Zeb1 function specifically delays the onset of astrocyte precursor delamination from the ventricular zone, correlating with transient deregulation of the adhesion protein Cadherin-1. Consequently, astrocyte precursor invasion into the Zeb1-/- mutant white matter is delayed, and induction of their differentiation is postponed. These findings illustrate how fine regulation of adhesive properties influences the onset of neural precursor migration and further support the notion that duration of exposure of migrating astrocyte precursors to environmental cues and/or their correct positioning influence the timing of their differentiation.Entities:
Keywords: Cadherin-1; GFAP; Sox9; Zeb1; Zeb2; astrocyte; cell migration; development; oligodendrocyte; spinal cord
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27806288 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.10.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423