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Potential neuron‐autonomous Purkinje cell degeneration by 2′,3′‐cyclic nucleotide 3′‐phosphodiesterase promoter/Cre‐mediated autophagy impairments

Authors :
Hwan Tae Park
Young Hye Kim
Hyeran Kim
Young Rae Jo
Kyung Eun Lee
Yoon Kyung Shin
Da Kyeong Park
Hana Go
Min-Young Song
Yuna Oh
Sung Joong Lee
Juyeon Jo
Sang-Myung Cheon
So Young Jang
Hyun Kyoung Lee
Source :
The FASEB Journal. 35
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Studies of neuroglial interaction largely depend on cell-specific gene knockout (KO) experiments using Cre recombinase. However, genes known as glial-specific genes have recently been reported to be expressed in neuroglial stem cells, leading to the possibility that a glia-specific Cre driver results in unwanted gene deletion in neurons, which may affect sound interpretation. 2',3'-Cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase (CNP) is generally considered to be an oligodendrocyte (OL) marker. Accordingly, Cnp promoter-controlled Cre recombinase has been used to create OL-specific gene targeting mice. However, in this study, using Rosa26-tdTomato-reporter/Cnp-Cre mice, we found that many forebrain neurons and cerebellar Purkinje neurons belong to the lineages of Cnp-expressing neuroglial stem cells. To answer whether gene targeting by Cnp-Cre can induce neuron-autonomous defects, we conditionally deleted an essential autophagy gene, Atg7, in Cnp-Cre mice. The Cnp-Cre-mediated Atg7 KO mice showed extensive p62 inclusion in neurons, including cerebellar Purkinje neurons with extensive neurodegeneration. Furthermore, neuronal areas showing p62 inclusion in Cnp-Cre-mediated Atg7 KO mice overlapped with the neuronal lineage of Cnp-expressing neuroglial stem cells. Moreover, Cnp-Cre-mediated Atg7-KO mice did not develop critical defects in myelination. Our results demonstrate that a large population of central neurons are derived from Cnp-expressing neuroglial stem cells; thus, conditional gene targeting using the Cnp promoter, which is known to be OL-specific, can induce neuron-autonomous phenotypes.

Details

ISSN :
15306860 and 08926638
Volume :
35
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The FASEB Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....752f1103f8b3817e4fe64e3e971bddc9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.202001366rr