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Publication : Plexin signaling selectively regulates the stereotyped pruning of corticospinal axons from visual cortex.

First Author  Low LK Year  2008
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  105
Issue  23 Pages  8136-41
PubMed ID  18523013 Mgi Jnum  J:137031
Mgi Id  MGI:3797669 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0803849105
Citation  Low LK, et al. (2008) Plexin signaling selectively regulates the stereotyped pruning of corticospinal axons from visual cortex. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105(23):8136-41
abstractText  Neurons in the developing CNS tend to send out long axon collaterals to multiple target areas. For these neurons to attain specific connections, some of their axon collaterals are subsequently pruned-a process called stereotyped axon pruning. One of the most striking examples of stereotyped pruning in the CNS is the pruning of corticospinal tract (CST) axons. The long CST collaterals from layer V neurons of the visual and motor cortices are differentially pruned during development. Here we demonstrate that select plexins and neuropilins, which serve as coreceptors for semaphorins, are expressed in visual cortical neurons at the time when CST axon collaterals are stereotypically pruned. By analyzing mutant mice, we find that the pruning of visual, but not motor, CST axon collaterals depends on plexin-A3, plexin-A4, and neuropilin-2. Expression pattern study suggests that Sema3F is a candidate local cue for the pruning of visual CST axons. Using electron microscopic analysis, we also show that visual CST axon collaterals form synaptic contacts in the spinal cord before pruning and that the unpruned collaterals in adult mutant mice are unmyelinated and maintain their synaptic contacts. Our results indicate that the stereotyped pruning of the visual and motor CST axon collaterals is differentially regulated and that this specificity arises from the differential expression of plexin receptors in the cortex.
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