Spatial control of astrogenesis progression by cortical arealization genes

Author:

Santo Manuela1,Rigoldi Laura1,Falcone Carmen2ORCID,Tuccillo Mariacarmine1,Calabrese Michela1,Martínez-Cerdeño Verónica3,Mallamaci Antonello1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Cerebral Cortex Development , Department of Neuroscience, SISSA, via Bonomea 265, I-34136 Trieste, Italy

2. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine , UC Davis School of Medicine, 4400 V St, CA-95817 Sacramento, USA

3. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine & MIND Institute , UC Davis School of Medicine, 4400 V St, CA-95817 Sacramento, USA

Abstract

Abstract Sizes of neuronal, astroglial and oligodendroglial complements forming the neonatal cerebral cortex largely depend on rates at which pallial stem cells give rise to lineage-committed progenitors and the latter ones progress to mature cell types. Here, we investigated the spatial articulation of pallial stem cells’ (SCs) commitment to astrogenesis as well as the progression of committed astroglial progenitors (APs) to differentiated astrocytes, by clonal and kinetic profiling of pallial precursors. We found that caudal-medial (CM) SCs are more prone to astrogenesis than rostro-lateral (RL) ones, while RL-committed APs are more keen to proliferate than CM ones. Next, we assessed the control of these phenomena by 2 key transcription factor genes mastering regionalization of the early cortical primordium, Emx2 and Foxg1, via lentiviral somatic transgenesis, epistasis assays, and ad hoc rescue assays. We demonstrated that preferential CM SCs progression to astrogenesis is promoted by Emx2, mainly via Couptf1, Nfia, and Sox9 upregulation, while Foxg1 antagonizes such progression to some extent, likely via repression of Zbtb20. Finally, we showed that Foxg1 and Emx2 may be implicated—asymmetrically and antithetically—in shaping distinctive proliferative/differentiative behaviors displayed by APs in hippocampus and neocortex.

Funder

International FOXG1 Research Foundation

SISSA

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

Reference53 articles.

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2. Regulation of area identity in the mammalian neocortex by Emx2 and Pax6;Bishop;Science,2000

3. Emx2 and Foxg1 inhibit gliogenesis and promote neuronogenesis;Brancaccio;Stem Cells,2010

4. Elevated FOXG1 and SOX2 in glioblastoma enforces neural stem cell identity through transcriptional control of cell cycle and epigenetic regulators;Bulstrode;Genes Dev,2017

5. Multiple origins and modularity in the spatiotemporal emergence of cerebellar astrocyte heterogeneity;Cerrato;PLoS Biol,2018

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