Abstract

Formation of the metazoan body plan requires a complex interplay of morphological changes and patterning, and central to these processes is the establishment of apical/basal cell polarity. In the developing nervous system, apical/basal cell polarity is essential for neural tube closure and maintenance of the neural stem cell population. In this report we explore how a signaling pathway important for nervous system development, Notch signaling, impacts on apical/basal cell polarity in neural differentiation. CSL−/− mouse embryos, which are devoid of canonical Notch signaling, demonstrated a neural tube phenotype consistent with cell polarity and convergent extension defects, including deficiencies in the restricted expression of apical polarity markers in the neuroepithelium. CSL−/− mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells, cultured at low density, behaved as wild-type in the establishment of neural progenitors and apical specification, though progression through rosette formation, an in vitro correlate of neurulation, required CSL for correct maintenance of rosette structure and regulation of neuronal differentiation. Similarly, acute pharmacological inhibition of Notch signaling led to the breakdown of neural rosettes and accelerated neuronal differentiation. In addition to functional Notch signaling, rosette integrity was found to require actin polymerization and Rho kinase (ROCK) activity. Disruption of rosettes through inhibition of actin polymerization or ROCK activity, however, had no effect on neuronal differentiation, indicating that rosette maintenance is not a prerequisite for normal neuronal differentiation. In conclusion, our data indicate that Notch signaling plays a role not only in differentiation, but also in organization and maintenance of polarity during development of the early nervous system.

Highlights

  • Development of the central nervous system (CNS) relies on intricate developmental programs to control the proliferation and differentiation of multiple cell types from neuroepithelial progenitors

  • In this report we address the relationship between Notch signaling and apical/basal polarity in mouse early nervous system development and in embryonic stem (ES) cells undergoing neural differentiation

  • We find that CSL2/2 mouse embryos exhibit a neurulation phenotype with aspects of polarity defects, and that neural rosette maintenance in ES cells undergoing neural differentiation is dynamically controlled by Notch signaling

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Summary

Introduction

Development of the central nervous system (CNS) relies on intricate developmental programs to control the proliferation and differentiation of multiple cell types from neuroepithelial progenitors. The CNS forms from the neural plate, a thickened pseudostratified epithelium, which, in mammals, bends and fuses to form the anterior neural tube in a process known as primary neurulation [1]. Central to formation of the neural tube and nervous system patterning is the establishment of apical/basal and planar cell polarity. Neural plate bending and tube closure requires planar cell polarity/convergence extension processes [3], which act in parallel with regulation of the actin cytoskeleton by Rho kinase (ROCK) and its activator RhoA for apical constriction and hinge point formation [4,5,6,7,8,9,10]

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