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Neurog2 Deficiency Uncovers a Critical Period of Cell Fate Plasticity and Vulnerability among Neural-Crest-Derived Somatosensory Progenitors.

Authors :
Ventéo, Stéphanie
Desiderio, Simon
Cabochette, Pauline
Deslys, Alexandre
Carroll, Patrick
Pattyn, Alexandre PA
Ventéo, Stéphanie
Desiderio, Simon
Cabochette, Pauline
Deslys, Alexandre
Carroll, Patrick
Pattyn, Alexandre PA
Source :
Cell reports, 29 (10
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Functionally distinct classes of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) somatosensory neurons arise from neural crest cells (NCCs) in two successive phases of differentiation assumed to be respectively and independently controlled by the proneural genes Neurog2 and Neurog1. However, the precise role of Neurog2 during this process remains unclear, notably because no neuronal loss has been reported hitherto in Neurog2-/- mutants. Here, we show that at trunk levels, Neurog2 deficiency impairs the production of subsets of all DRG neuron subtypes. We establish that this phenotype is highly dynamic and reflects multiple defects in NCC-derived progenitors, including somatosensory-to-melanocyte fate switch, apoptosis, and delayed differentiation which alters neuronal identity, all occurring during a narrow time window when Neurog2 temporarily controls onset of Neurog1 expression and neurogenesis. Collectively, these findings uncover a critical period of cell fate plasticity and vulnerability among somatosensory progenitors and establish that Neurog2 function in the developing DRG is broader than initially envisaged.<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Cell reports, 29 (10
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1415716729
Document Type :
Electronic Resource