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Publication : Loss of postnatal quiescence of neural stem cells through mTOR activation upon genetic removal of cysteine string protein-α.

First Author  Nieto-González JL Year  2019
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  116
Issue  16 Pages  8000-8009
PubMed ID  30926666 Mgi Jnum  J:273810
Mgi Id  MGI:6294505 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1817183116
Citation  Nieto-Gonzalez JL, et al. (2019) Loss of postnatal quiescence of neural stem cells through mTOR activation upon genetic removal of cysteine string protein-alpha. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 116(16):8000-8009
abstractText  Neural stem cells continuously generate newborn neurons that integrate into and modify neural circuitry in the adult hippocampus. The molecular mechanisms that regulate or perturb neural stem cell proliferation and differentiation, however, remain poorly understood. Here, we have found that mouse hippocampal radial glia-like (RGL) neural stem cells express the synaptic cochaperone cysteine string protein-alpha (CSP-alpha). Remarkably, in CSP-alpha knockout mice, RGL stem cells lose quiescence postnatally and enter into a high-proliferation regime that increases the production of neural intermediate progenitor cells, thereby exhausting the hippocampal neural stem cell pool. In cell culture, stem cells in hippocampal neurospheres display alterations in proliferation for which hyperactivation of the mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling pathway is the primary cause of neurogenesis deregulation in the absence of CSP-alpha. In addition, RGL cells lose quiescence upon specific conditional targeting of CSP-alpha in adult neural stem cells. Our findings demonstrate an unanticipated cell-autonomic and circuit-independent disruption of postnatal neurogenesis in the absence of CSP-alpha and highlight a direct or indirect CSP-alpha/mTOR signaling interaction that may underlie molecular mechanisms of brain dysfunction and neurodegeneration.
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