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Publication : Eph tyrosine kinase receptor EphA4 is required for the topographic mapping of the corticospinal tract.

First Author  Canty AJ Year  2006
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  103
Issue  42 Pages  15629-34
PubMed ID  17030822 Mgi Jnum  J:115340
Mgi Id  MGI:3691404 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0607350103
Citation  Canty AJ, et al. (2006) Eph tyrosine kinase receptor EphA4 is required for the topographic mapping of the corticospinal tract. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103(42):15629-34
abstractText  Fine movement in the body is controlled by the motor cortex, which signals in a topographically specific manner to neurons in the spinal cord by means of the corticospinal tract (CST). How the correct topography of the CST is established is unknown. To investigate the possibility that the Eph tyrosine kinase receptor EphA4 is involved in this process, we have traced CST axons in mice in which the EphA4 gene has been deleted. The forelimb subpopulation of CST axons is unaffected in the EphA4-/- mice, but the hindlimb subpopulation branches too early within the cord, both temporally and spatially. EphA4 shows a dynamic expression pattern in the environment of the developing CST in the spinal cord: high at the time of forelimb branching and down-regulated before hindlimb branching. To examine whether the fore- and hindlimb subpopulations of CST axons respond differently to EphA4 in their environment, neurons from fore- and hindlimb motor cortex were cultured on a substrate containing EphA4. Neurons from the hindlimb cortex showed reduced branching on the EphA4 substrate compared with their forelimb counterparts. Neurons from the hindlimb cortex express ephrinA5, a high-affinity ligand for EphA4, at higher levels compared with forelimb cortex neurons, and this expression is down-regulated before hindlimb branching. Together, these findings suggest that EphA4 regulates topographic mapping of the CST by controlling the branching of CST axons in the spinal cord.
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