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Publication : Autophagy drives the conversion of developmental neural stem cells to the adult quiescent state.

First Author  Calatayud-Baselga I Year  2023
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  14
Issue  1 Pages  7541
PubMed ID  38001081 Mgi Jnum  J:343252
Mgi Id  MGI:7563446 Doi  10.1038/s41467-023-43222-1
Citation  Calatayud-Baselga I, et al. (2023) Autophagy drives the conversion of developmental neural stem cells to the adult quiescent state. Nat Commun 14(1):7541
abstractText  Neurogenesis in the adult mammalian brain relies on the lifelong persistence of quiescent neural stem cell (NSC) reservoirs. Little is known about the mechanisms that lead to the initial establishment of quiescence, the main hallmark of adult stem cells, during development. Here we show that protein aggregates and autophagy machinery components accumulate in developmental radial glia-like NSCs as they enter quiescence and that pharmacological or genetic blockade of autophagy disrupts quiescence acquisition and maintenance. Conversely, increasing autophagy through AMPK/ULK1 activation instructs the acquisition of the quiescent state without affecting BMP signaling, a gatekeeper of NSC quiescence during adulthood. Selective ablation of Atg7, a critical gene for autophagosome formation, in radial glia-like NSCs at early and late postnatal stages compromises the initial acquisition and maintenance of quiescence during the formation of the hippocampal dentate gyrus NSC niche. Therefore, we demonstrate that autophagy is cell-intrinsically required to establish NSC quiescence during hippocampal development. Our results uncover an important role of autophagy in the transition of developmental NSCs into their dormant adult form, paving the way for studies directed at further understanding the mechanisms of stem cell niche formation and maintenance in the mammalian brain.
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