|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Dystroglycan on radial glia end feet is required for pial basement membrane integrity and columnar organization of the developing cerebral cortex.

First Author  Myshrall TD Year  2012
Journal  J Neuropathol Exp Neurol Volume  71
Issue  12 Pages  1047-63
PubMed ID  23147502 Mgi Jnum  J:203478
Mgi Id  MGI:5527067 Doi  10.1097/NEN.0b013e318274a128
Citation  Myshrall TD, et al. (2012) Dystroglycan on radial glia end feet is required for pial basement membrane integrity and columnar organization of the developing cerebral cortex. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 71(12):1047-63
abstractText  Interactions between the embryonic pial basement membrane (PBM) and radial glia (RG) are essential for morphogenesis of the cerebral cortex because disrupted interactions cause cobblestone malformations. To elucidate the role of dystroglycan (DG) in PBM-RG interactions, we studied the expression of DG protein and Dag1 mRNA (which encodes DG protein) in developing cerebral cortex and analyzed cortical phenotypes in Dag1 CNS conditional mutant mice. In normal embryonic cortex, Dag1 mRNA was expressed in the ventricular zone, which contains RG nuclei, whereas DG protein was expressed at the cortical surface on RG end feet. Breaches of PBM continuity appeared during early neurogenesis in Dag1 mutants. Diverse cellular elements streamed through the breaches to form leptomeningeal heterotopia that were confluent with the underlying residual cortical plate and contained variably truncated RG fibers, many types of cortical neurons, and radial and intermediate progenitor cells. Nevertheless, layer-specific molecular expression seemed normal in heterotopic neurons, and axons projected to appropriate targets. Dendrites, however, were excessively tortuous and lacked radial orientation. These findings indicate that DG is required on RG end feet to maintain PBM integrity and suggest that cobblestone malformations involve disturbances of RG structure, progenitor distribution, and dendrite orientation, in addition to neuronal "overmigration."
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

18 Bio Entities

0 Expression