JOURNAL ARTICLE

Neuronal Subtype Generation During Postnatal Olfactory Bulb Neurogenesis

Alexandra AngelovaMarie-Catherine TiveronHarold CremerChristophe Béclin

Year: 2018 Journal:   Journal of Experimental Neuroscience Vol: 12 Pages: 1179069518755670-1179069518755670   Publisher: SAGE Publishing

Abstract

In the perinatal and adult forebrain, regionalized neural stem cells lining the ventricular walls produce different types of olfactory bulb interneurons. Although these postnatal stem cells are lineage related to their embryonic counterparts that produce, for example, cortical, septal, and striatal neurons, their output at the level of neuronal phenotype changes dramatically. Tiveron et al. investigated the molecular determinants underlying stem cell regionalization and the gene expression changes inducing the shift from embryonic to adult neuron production. High-resolution gene expression analyses of different lineages revealed that the zinc finger proteins, Zic1 and Zic2, are postnatally induced in the dorsal olfactory bulb neuron lineage. Functional studies demonstrated that these factors confer a GABAergic and calretinin-positive phenotype to neural stem cells while repressing dopaminergic fate. Based on these findings, we discuss the molecular mechanisms that allow acquisition of new traits during the transition from embryonic to adult neurogenesis. We focus on the involvement of epigenetic marks and emphasize why the identification of master transcription factors, that instruct the fate of postnatally generated neurons, can help in deciphering the mechanisms driving fate transition from embryonic to adult neuron production.

Keywords:
Neurogenesis Olfactory bulb Biology Neuroscience Embryonic stem cell Neural stem cell Forebrain Neuron Subventricular zone Stem cell Cell biology Genetics Gene Central nervous system

Metrics

12
Cited By
0.84
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
17
Refs
0.65
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Neurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanisms
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Developmental Neuroscience
Developmental Biology and Gene Regulation
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
MicroRNA in disease regulation
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Cancer Research
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