TY - JOUR
T1 - Primary cilia are critical for Sonic hedgehog-mediated dopaminergic neurogenesis in the embryonic midbrain
AU - Gazea, Mary
AU - Tasouri, Evangelia
AU - Tolve, Marianna
AU - Bosch, Viktoria
AU - Kabanova, Anna
AU - Gojak, Christian
AU - Kurtulmus, Bahtiyar
AU - Novikov, Orna
AU - Spatz, Joachim
AU - Pereira, Gislene
AU - Hübner, Wolfgang
AU - Brodski, Claude
AU - Tucker, Kerry L.
AU - Blaess, Sandra
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors were supported by the German Research Society (KLT: DFG SFB 488 , Teilprojekt B9 ; MT: fellowship of the SFB 1049 ), the University of New England (KLT), the North-Rhine-Westphalia Repatriation Program of the Ministry for Innovation, Science and Research of North Rhine Westphalia (SB); the Maria von Linden-Program, University of Bonn (SB), and the Israeli Science Foundation (CB: grant 1391/11 ). These funding bodies did not play any role in the design, acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data, nor did they play a role in drafting the manuscript or revising it critically for intellectual content. The authors would like to thank Joachim Kirsch, Oliver Brüstle, and Thomas Huser for generous scientific support, Marten Smidt for the Aadc and Vmat2 in situ probes, Bradley K. Yoder for the Ift88 floxed line, Andrew McMahon for the R26 SmoM2 line and Tamara Caspary for the anti-Arl13b antibody. The authors declare no competing financial interests or other conflicts of interest.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2016/1/1
Y1 - 2016/1/1
N2 - Midbrain dopaminergic (mDA) neurons modulate various motor and cognitive functions, and their dysfunction or degeneration has been implicated in several psychiatric diseases. Both Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) and Wnt signaling pathways have been shown to be essential for normal development of mDA neurons. Primary cilia are critical for the development of a number of structures in the brain by serving as a hub for essential developmental signaling cascades, but their role in the generation of mDA neurons has not been examined. We analyzed mutant mouse lines deficient in the intraflagellar transport protein IFT88, which is critical for primary cilia function. Conditional inactivation of Ift88 in the midbrain after E9.0 results in progressive loss of primary cilia, a decreased size of the mDA progenitor domain, and a reduction in mDA neurons. We identified Shh signaling as the primary cause of these defects, since conditional inactivation of the Shh signaling pathway after E9.0, through genetic ablation of Gli2 and Gli3 in the midbrain, results in a phenotype basically identical to the one seen in Ift88 conditional mutants. Moreover, the expansion of the mDA progenitor domain observed when Shh signaling is constitutively activated does not occur in absence of Ift88. In contrast, clusters of Shh-responding progenitors are maintained in the ventral midbrain of the hypomorphic Ift88 mouse mutant, cobblestone. Despite the residual Shh signaling, the integrity of the mDA progenitor domain is severely disturbed, and consequently very few mDA neurons are generated in cobblestone mutants. Our results identify for the first time a crucial role of primary cilia in the induction of mDA progenitors, define a narrow time window in which Shh-mediated signaling is dependent upon normal primary cilia function for this purpose, and suggest that later Wnt signaling-dependent events act independently of primary cilia.
AB - Midbrain dopaminergic (mDA) neurons modulate various motor and cognitive functions, and their dysfunction or degeneration has been implicated in several psychiatric diseases. Both Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) and Wnt signaling pathways have been shown to be essential for normal development of mDA neurons. Primary cilia are critical for the development of a number of structures in the brain by serving as a hub for essential developmental signaling cascades, but their role in the generation of mDA neurons has not been examined. We analyzed mutant mouse lines deficient in the intraflagellar transport protein IFT88, which is critical for primary cilia function. Conditional inactivation of Ift88 in the midbrain after E9.0 results in progressive loss of primary cilia, a decreased size of the mDA progenitor domain, and a reduction in mDA neurons. We identified Shh signaling as the primary cause of these defects, since conditional inactivation of the Shh signaling pathway after E9.0, through genetic ablation of Gli2 and Gli3 in the midbrain, results in a phenotype basically identical to the one seen in Ift88 conditional mutants. Moreover, the expansion of the mDA progenitor domain observed when Shh signaling is constitutively activated does not occur in absence of Ift88. In contrast, clusters of Shh-responding progenitors are maintained in the ventral midbrain of the hypomorphic Ift88 mouse mutant, cobblestone. Despite the residual Shh signaling, the integrity of the mDA progenitor domain is severely disturbed, and consequently very few mDA neurons are generated in cobblestone mutants. Our results identify for the first time a crucial role of primary cilia in the induction of mDA progenitors, define a narrow time window in which Shh-mediated signaling is dependent upon normal primary cilia function for this purpose, and suggest that later Wnt signaling-dependent events act independently of primary cilia.
KW - Dopaminergic neurons
KW - Ift88
KW - Intraflagellar transport
KW - Midbrain
KW - Primary cilia
KW - Shh
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84949510944&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ydbio.2015.10.033
DO - 10.1016/j.ydbio.2015.10.033
M3 - Article
C2 - 26542012
AN - SCOPUS:84949510944
SN - 0012-1606
VL - 409
SP - 55
EP - 71
JO - Developmental Biology
JF - Developmental Biology
IS - 1
ER -