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Publication : Disabled-1 acts downstream of Reelin in a signaling pathway that controls laminar organization in the mammalian brain.

First Author  Rice DS Year  1998
Journal  Development Volume  125
Issue  18 Pages  3719-29
PubMed ID  9716537 Mgi Jnum  J:50400
Mgi Id  MGI:1303264 Doi  10.1242/dev.125.18.3719
Citation  Rice DS, et al. (1998) Disabled-1 acts downstream of Reelin in a signaling pathway that controls laminar organization in the mammalian brain. Development 125(18):3719-29
abstractText  Mutation of either reelin (Reln) or disabled-1 (Dab1) results in widespread abnormalities in laminar structures throughout the brain and ataxia in reeler and scrambler mice. Both exhibit the same neuroanatomical defects, including cerebellar hypoplasia with Purkinje cell ectopia and disruption of neuronal layers in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus. Despite these phenotypic similarities, Rein and Dab1 have distinct molecular properties. Rein is a large extracellular protein secreted by Cajal-Retzius cells in the forebrain and by granule neurons in the cerebellum. In contrast, Dab1 is a cytoplasmic protein which has properties of an adapter protein that functions in phosphorylation-dependent intracellular signal transduction, Here, we show that Dab1 participates in the same developmental process as Rein. In scrambler mice, neuronal precursors are unable to invade the preplate of the cerebral cortex and consequently, they do not align within the cortical plate, During development, cells expressing Dab1 are located next to those secreting Rein at critical stages of formation of the cerebral cortex, cerebellum and hippocampus, before the first abnormalities in cell position become apparent in either reeler or scrambler. In reeler, the major populations of displaced neurons contain elevated levels of Dab1 protein, although they express normal levels of Dab1 mRNA, This suggests that Dab1 accumulates in the absence of a Reln-evoked signal. Taken together, these results indicate that Dab1 functions downstream of Reln in a signaling pathway that controls cell positioning in the developing brain.
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