|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Prolonged Mitosis of Neural Progenitors Alters Cell Fate in the Developing Brain.

First Author  Pilaz LJ Year  2016
Journal  Neuron Volume  89
Issue  1 Pages  83-99
PubMed ID  26748089 Mgi Jnum  J:230878
Mgi Id  MGI:5766409 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2015.12.007
Citation  Pilaz LJ, et al. (2016) Prolonged Mitosis of Neural Progenitors Alters Cell Fate in the Developing Brain. Neuron 89(1):83-99
abstractText  Embryonic neocortical development depends on balanced production of progenitors and neurons. Genetic mutations disrupting progenitor mitosis frequently impair neurogenesis; however, the link between altered mitosis and cell fate remains poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that prolonged mitosis of radial glial progenitors directly alters neuronal fate specification and progeny viability. Live imaging of progenitors from a neurogenesis mutant, Magoh(+/-), reveals that mitotic delay significantly correlates with preferential production of neurons instead of progenitors, as well as apoptotic progeny. Independently, two pharmacological approaches reveal a causal relationship between mitotic delay and progeny fate. As mitotic duration increases, progenitors produce substantially more apoptotic progeny or neurons. We show that apoptosis, but not differentiation, is p53 dependent, demonstrating that these are distinct outcomes of mitotic delay. Together our findings reveal that prolonged mitosis is sufficient to alter fates of radial glia progeny and define a new paradigm to understand how mitosis perturbations underlie brain size disorders such as microcephaly.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

27 Bio Entities

0 Expression