Engrailed transcription factors direct excitatory cerebellar neuron diversity and survival

Author:

Krishnamurthy Anjana12,Lee Andrew S.12,Bayin N. Sumru1,Stephen Daniel N.1,Nasef Olivia1,Lao Zhimin1,Joyner Alexandra L.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sloan Kettering Institute, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center 1 Developmental Biology Program , , New York, NY 10021 , USA

2. Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences 2 Neuroscience Program , , New York, NY 10065 , USA

3. Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences 3 Biochemistry, Cell and Molecular Biology Program , , New York, NY 10065 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT The neurons of the three cerebellar nuclei (CN) are the primary output neurons of the cerebellum. The excitatory neurons (e) of the medial (m) CN (eCNm) were recently divided into molecularly defined subdomains in the adult; however, how they are established during development is not known. We define molecular subdomains of the mouse embryonic eCNm using single-cell RNA-sequencing and spatial expression analysis, showing that they evolve during embryogenesis to prefigure the adult. Furthermore, eCNm are transcriptionally divergent from cells in the other nuclei by embryonic day 14.5. We previously showed that loss of the homeobox genes En1 and En2 leads to loss of approximately half of the embryonic eCNm. We demonstrate that mutation of En1/2 in the embryonic eCNm results in death of specific posterior eCNm molecular subdomains and downregulation of TBR2 (EOMES) in an anterior embryonic subdomain, as well as reduced synaptic gene expression. We further reveal a similar function for EN1/2 in mediating TBR2 expression, neuron differentiation and survival in the other excitatory neurons (granule and unipolar brush cells). Thus, our work defines embryonic eCNm molecular diversity and reveals conserved roles for EN1/2 in the cerebellar excitatory neuron lineage.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

National Cancer Institute

Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center

Weill Cornell Medicine

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

New York State Stem Cell Science

Hunter College

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

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