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Publication : Tlx3 controls cholinergic transmitter and Peptide phenotypes in a subset of prenatal sympathetic neurons.

First Author  Huang T Year  2013
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  33
Issue  26 Pages  10667-75
PubMed ID  23804090 Mgi Jnum  J:199638
Mgi Id  MGI:5504300 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0192-13.2013
Citation  Huang T, et al. (2013) Tlx3 controls cholinergic transmitter and Peptide phenotypes in a subset of prenatal sympathetic neurons. J Neurosci 33(26):10667-75
abstractText  The embryonic sympathetic nervous system consists of predominantly noradrenergic neurons and a very small population of cholinergic neurons. Postnatal development further allows target-dependent switch of a subset of noradrenergic neurons into cholinergic phenotype. How embryonic cholinergic neurons are specified at the prenatal stages remains largely unknown. In this study, we found that the expression of transcription factor Tlx3 was progressively restricted to a small population of embryonic sympathetic neurons in mice. Immunostaining for vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) showed that Tlx3 was highly expressed in cholinergic neurons at the late embryonic stage E18.5. Deletion of Tlx3 resulted in the loss of Vacht expression at E18.5 but not E12.5. By contrast, Tlx3 was required for expression of the cholinergic peptide vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), and somatostatin (SOM) at both E12.5 and E18.5. Furthermore, we found that, at E18.5 these putative cholinergic neurons expressed glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor family coreceptor Ret but not tyrosine hydroxylase (Ret(+)/TH(-)). Deletion of Tlx3 also resulted in disappearance of high-level Ret expression. Last, unlike Tlx3, Ret was required for the expression of VIP and SOM at E18.5 but not E12.5. Together, these results indicate that transcription factor Tlx3 is required for the acquisition of cholinergic phenotype at the late embryonic stage as well as the expression and maintenance of cholinergic peptides VIP and SOM throughout prenatal development of mouse sympathetic neurons.
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