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Publication : Exogenous Reelin modifies the migratory behavior of neurons depending on cortical location.

First Author  Britto JM Year  2014
Journal  Cereb Cortex Volume  24
Issue  11 Pages  2835-47
PubMed ID  23749873 Mgi Jnum  J:226379
Mgi Id  MGI:5697148 Doi  10.1093/cercor/bht123
Citation  Britto JM, et al. (2014) Exogenous Reelin modifies the migratory behavior of neurons depending on cortical location. Cereb Cortex 24(11):2835-47
abstractText  Malformations of cortical development can arise when projection neurons generated in the germinal zones fail to migrate properly into the cortical plate. This process is critically dependent on the Reelin glycoprotein, which when absent leads to an inversion of cortical layers and blurring of borders. Reelin has other functions including supporting neuron migration and maintaining their trajectories; however, the precise role on glial fiber-dependent or -independent migration of neurons remains controversial. In this study, we wish to test the hypothesis that migrating cortical neurons at different levels of the cortical wall have differential responses to Reelin. We exposed neurons migrating across the cortical wall to exogenous Reelin and monitored their migratory behavior using time-lapse imaging. Our results show that, in the germinal zones, exogenous Reelin retarded neuron migration and altered their trajectories. This behavior is in contrast to the response of neurons located in the intermediate zone (IZ), possibly because Reelin receptors are not expressed in this zone. In the reeler cortex, Reelin receptors are expressed in the IZ and exposure to exogenous Reelin was able to rescue the migratory defect. These studies demonstrate that migrating neurons have nonequivalent responses to Reelin depending on their location within the cortical wall.
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