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A Mutually Stimulating Loop Involving Emx2 and Canonical Wnt Signalling Specifically Promotes Expansion of Occipital Cortex and Hippocampus
Author(s) -
Luca Muzio,
José Miguel Soria,
Maria Pannese,
Stefano Piccolo,
Antonello Mallamaci
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
cerebral cortex
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.694
H-Index - 250
eISSN - 1460-2199
pISSN - 1047-3211
DOI - 10.1093/cercor/bhi077
Subject(s) - wnt signaling pathway , hippocampal formation , progenitor cell , biology , hippocampus , cortex (anatomy) , progenitor , neuroscience , emx2 , cerebral cortex , microbiology and biotechnology , stem cell , transcription factor , genetics , signal transduction , homeobox , gene
The correct size of the different areas composing the mature cerebral cortex depends on the proper early allocation of cortical progenitors to their distinctive areal fates, as well as on appropriate subsequent tuning of their area-specific proliferation-differentiation profiles. Whereas much is known about the genetics of the former process, the molecular mechanisms regulating proliferation and differentiation rates within distinctive cortical proto-areas are still largely obscure. Here we show that a mutual stimulating loop, involving Emx2 and canonical Wnt signalling, specifically promotes expansion of the occipito-hippocampal anlage. Collapse of this loop occurring in Emx2-/- mutants leads progenitors within this region to slow down DNA synthesis and exit prematurely from the cell cycle, due to misregulation of cell cycle-, proneural- and lateral inhibition-molecular machineries, and eventually results in dramatic and selective size-reduction of occipital cortex and hippocampus. Reactivation of canonical Wnt signalling in the same mutants rescues a subset of molecular abnormalities and corrects differentiation rates of occipito-hippocampal progenitors.

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