| Literature DB >> 30618631 |
Maryam Rahimi-Balaei1,2, Hugo Bergen1, Jiming Kong1, Hassan Marzban1,2.
Abstract
Neuronal migration is a fundamental process in central nervous system (CNS) development. The assembly of functioning neuronal circuits relies on neuronal migration occurring in the appropriate spatio-temporal pattern. A defect in the neuronal migration may result in a neurological disorder. The cerebellum, as a part of the CNS, plays a pivotal role in motor coordination and non-motor functions such as emotion, cognition and language. The excitatory and inhibitory neurons within the cerebellum originate from different distinct germinal zones and migrate through complex routes to assemble in a well-defined neuronal organization in the cerebellar cortex and nuclei. In this review article, the neuronal migration modes and pathways from germinal zones to the final position in the cerebellar cortex and nuclei will be described. The cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in cerebellar neuronal migration during development will also be reviewed. Finally, some diseases and animal models associated with defects in neuronal migration will be presented.Entities:
Keywords: cerebellum; development; mechanism; migration; neuron
Year: 2018 PMID: 30618631 PMCID: PMC6304365 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2018.00484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Methods to study neuronal migration (Mannan et al., 2004; Baubet et al., 2012; Rahimi-Balaei et al., 2016).
| Techniques for progenitor differentiation and neuronal migration | |
|---|---|
| Traditional | Analysis of fixed tissue |
| Advanced | Electron microscopy Tissue culture methods Chimeras X-ray crystallography Genetic labeling |
| Recent | Live imaging techniques Genetic labeling of distinct cell types in developing brain Real-time neuronal migration in embryonic brain slice assay (fluorescent dyes or XFP transgenes, lipophilic or vital dyes, such as DiI, DiO, CMTMR, Oregon Green plus dye- or transgene-coated gold particles Neuronal migration in embryonic brain explants in 3-D matrigel Embryonic culture Dynamic |
Figure 1Neuronal migration during postnatal cerebellar development. A schematic illustration of cerebellar development at sagittal section of postnatal mice. It shows that Purkinje cells (PCs) cluster disperse to establish PC monolayer and start maturation while granular layer form from external germinal zone (E18–P20). (A,A′) Around E18 to P3, PCs are in clusteric stage and show high CAMs connections between PCs-PCs and PCs-Bergmann glial cell body which is located beside PCs during clusteric stage and extend their fibers to the cerebellar pia surface. (B,B′) PCs in dispersal situation and positioning process (P3–P7) with less CAMs connections and show shortened Bergmann glial fibers. (C,C′) It shows how premature PCs (P12/13) arborized (maturation process) while granule cell precursors (GCPs) migrate to the developing granular layer and become mature GCs. (D,D′) At around P18/20 is end stage of the PCs maturation and GCPs inward migration. P, postnatal day; E, embryonic day; CAMs, cell adhesion molecules.
Mutant mice models with cerebellar neuronal migration defects.
| Mouse model | Gene | Function | Defect | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neuronal migration (Purkinje cells in cerebellum and pyramidal cells in cerebral cortex) | Ectopic Purkinje cell cluster (~80%), no foliation, cerebellar hypoplasia | Goffinet ( | |||
| The Reelin-Dab1 signaling pathway involves in neuronal migration and also in lamination | Ectopic Purkinje cell cluster, no foliation, cerebellar hypoplasia | Chung et al. ( | |||
| Reelin receptors involves in neuronal migration and also in lamination | Ectopic Purkinje cell cluster, no foliation, cerebellar hypoplasia | Reddy et al. ( | |||
| Downstream molecules of Reelin signaling pathway involves in neuronal migration and also in lamination | Ectopic Purkinje cell cluster, no foliation, cerebellar hypoplasia | Kuo et al. ( | |||
| RORa is a gene expressed only in Purkinje cells in the olivocerebellar circuit | Purkinje cells are small, ectopic, possess rudimentary dendritic arbors and their number is reduced by about 75%. All of the granule cells and 60% of the inferior olivary neurons die during the first postnatal month. | Hadj-Sahraoui et al. ( | |||
| Pten express in Bergmann glia (scaffold) | Ectopic Purkinje cells and Purkinje cell dendritic arborization | Yue et al. ( | |||
| Member of SHH pathway | Ectopic clusters of Purkinje cells with disorganized dendritic arbors and axonal collaterals | Armengol and Sotelo ( | |||
| Naked Ataxic ( | Lysosomal acid phosphatase 2 | Excessive migration of Purkinje cells to the molecular layer, no Purkinje cell monolayer formation, cerebellar hypoplasia, reduced granule cells proliferation | Mannan et al. ( | ||
| Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 and its regulator, p35 involve in neuronal migration, proliferation and neurite outgrowth | Normal gross morphology, folia and lamination. Molecular layer with more cell density (GCs) and ectopic PCs in granular layer | Chae et al. ( | |||
| G protein-activated inward rectifier potassium channel 2 | Beside PCs and GCs death, neuronal migration defect as a result of Bergman glia abnormality | Rakic and Sidman ( | |||
| GABAergic and Glutamatergic neuron development | Severe cerebellar hypoplasia and developmental failure of Purkinje cells, Bergmann glia and granule cells | Baubet et al. ( | |||
| The chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4) | #x02013;chemokine ligand 12 signaling pathway involve in neuronal migration and proliferation | Abnormal cerebellum, ectopic PCs, irregular external germinal zone | Ma et al. ( | ||
| Genes for glial-guided neuronal migration | Ectopic granule cells precursors, abnormal Purkinje cell dendrite development, and external germinal zone present until late childhood cerebellum | Faust ( | |||
| Purkinje cells provide BDNF and promote granule cells precursors to differentiate and migrate along Bergmann glia fibers | Defects in cerebellar patterning such as ectopic granule cells precursors | Borghesani et al. ( | |||
| Survival of granule cells | Purkinje cells are disarranged with dystrophic dendrites | Marino et al. ( | |||
| Disrupting multiple vesicle transport pathways to lysosomes | Neurodegeneration and impaired neuronal migration | Peng et al. ( | |||
| Link between p53 and Shh signaling pathways in granular neuronal precursors | Reduced levels of MDM2 and increased levels of p53 have small cerebella with shortened folia, reminiscent of deficient Shh signaling | Malek et al. ( | |||
| Cerebellar nuclei migration | Defect in medial cerebellar nuclei plus lateral and interpose | Fink et al. ( |