Abstract

The cortex consists of 100s of neuronal subtypes that are organized into distinct functional regions; however, the mechanisms underlying cell fate determination remain unclear. Foxg1 is involved in several developmental processes, including telencephalic patterning, cell proliferation and cell fate determination. Constitutive disruption of Foxg1 leads to the transformation of cortical neurons into Cajal-Retzius (CR) cells, accompanied by a substantial expansion of the cortical hem through the consumption of the cortex. However, rather than the induction of a cell fate switch, another group has reported a large lateral to medial repatterning of the developing telencephalon as the explanation for this change in cell type output. Here, we conditionally disrupted Foxg1 in telencephalic progenitor cells by crossing Foxg1fl/fl mice with Nestin-CreERTM mice combined with tamoxifen (TM) induction at distinct developmental stages beginning at E10.5 to further elucidate the role of FoxG1 in cell fate determination after telencephalon pattern formation. The number of dentate gyrus (DG) granule-like cells was significantly increased in the cortex. The increase was even detected after deletion at E14.5. In vivo mosaic deletion and in vitro cell culture further revealed a cell-autonomous role for FoxG1 in repressing granule cell fate. However, the cortical hem, which is required for the patterning and the development of the hippocampus, was only slightly enlarged and thus may not contribute to the cell fate switch. Lef1 expression was significantly upregulated in the lateral, cortical VZ and FoxG1 may function upstream of Wnt signaling. Our results provide new insights into the functions of FoxG1 and the mechanisms of cell fate determination during telencephalic development.

Highlights

  • The large variety of neuronal cell types in the cerebral cortex arises from the neuroepithelium

  • Foxg1 was deleted in neuronal progenitors at distinct developmental stages by crossing Foxg1fl/fl mice with the Nestin-CreERTM line (Imayoshi et al, 2006) combined with tamoxifen (TM) induction to identify the role of FoxG1 in cell fate determination beginning at E10.5

  • In the present study, using temporal loss-of-function of Foxg1, we have revealed a cell-autonomous role for FoxG1 in repressing dentate gyrus (DG) granule cell fate beginning at E10.5

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Summary

Introduction

The large variety of neuronal cell types in the cerebral cortex arises from the neuroepithelium. Cortical neurons are born in a sequential order from E12.5E17.5, with deep layer neurons produced first followed by upper layer neurons (Mcconnell and Kaznowski, 1991; Caviness and Takahashi, 1995; Tan et al, 1998; Shen et al, 2006; Molyneaux et al, 2007) Hippocampal cells such as dentate gyrus (DG) granule cells are generated from the medial pallium and their birth is initiated at E13 and continues at high levels until postnatal day 15 in mice (Machon et al, 2007; Yu et al, 2014) before receding to a lower ongoing adult level. Researchers have not clearly elucidated the mechanism responsible for the spatiotemporal determination of these specific cell fates

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