Publication | Closed Access
<i>Ezh2</i> Orchestrates Topographic Migration and Connectivity of Mouse Precerebellar Neurons
126
Citations
28
References
2013
Year
Epigenetic ChangeCellular NeurobiologySynaptic SignalingEpigeneticsCellular PhysiologyHistone Methyltransferase Ezh2Mouse Precerebellar NeuronsNormal PontineNervous SystemEpigenetic RegulationCell BiologySynaptic PlasticityDevelopmental BiologyNeuroanatomyPontine NucleiNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyCentral Nervous SystemMedicineNeural Stem Cell
We investigated the role of histone methyltransferase Ezh2 in tangential migration of mouse precerebellar pontine nuclei, the main relay between neocortex and cerebellum. By counteracting the sonic hedgehog pathway, Ezh2 represses Netrin1 in dorsal hindbrain, which allows normal pontine neuron migration. In Ezh2 mutants, ectopic Netrin1 derepression results in abnormal migration and supernumerary nuclei integrating in brain circuitry. Moreover, intrinsic topographic organization of pontine nuclei according to rostrocaudal progenitor origin is maintained throughout migration and correlates with patterned cortical input. Ezh2 maintains spatially restricted Hox expression, which, in turn, regulates differential expression of the repulsive receptor Unc5b in migrating neurons; together, they generate subsets with distinct responsiveness to environmental Netrin1. Thus, Ezh2-dependent epigenetic regulation of intrinsic and extrinsic transcriptional programs controls topographic neuronal guidance and connectivity in the cortico-ponto-cerebellar pathway.
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