Zbtb20 Defines a Hippocampal Neuronal Identity Through Direct Repression of Genes That Control Projection Neuron Development in the Isocortex

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Standard

Zbtb20 Defines a Hippocampal Neuronal Identity Through Direct Repression of Genes That Control Projection Neuron Development in the Isocortex. / Nielsen, Jakob V; Thomassen, Mads; Møllgård, Kjeld; Noraberg, Jens; Jensen, Niels A.

I: Cerebral Cortex, Bind 24, Nr. 5, 05.2014, s. 1216-1229.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nielsen, JV, Thomassen, M, Møllgård, K, Noraberg, J & Jensen, NA 2014, 'Zbtb20 Defines a Hippocampal Neuronal Identity Through Direct Repression of Genes That Control Projection Neuron Development in the Isocortex', Cerebral Cortex, bind 24, nr. 5, s. 1216-1229. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhs400

APA

Nielsen, J. V., Thomassen, M., Møllgård, K., Noraberg, J., & Jensen, N. A. (2014). Zbtb20 Defines a Hippocampal Neuronal Identity Through Direct Repression of Genes That Control Projection Neuron Development in the Isocortex. Cerebral Cortex, 24(5), 1216-1229. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhs400

Vancouver

Nielsen JV, Thomassen M, Møllgård K, Noraberg J, Jensen NA. Zbtb20 Defines a Hippocampal Neuronal Identity Through Direct Repression of Genes That Control Projection Neuron Development in the Isocortex. Cerebral Cortex. 2014 maj;24(5):1216-1229. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhs400

Author

Nielsen, Jakob V ; Thomassen, Mads ; Møllgård, Kjeld ; Noraberg, Jens ; Jensen, Niels A. / Zbtb20 Defines a Hippocampal Neuronal Identity Through Direct Repression of Genes That Control Projection Neuron Development in the Isocortex. I: Cerebral Cortex. 2014 ; Bind 24, Nr. 5. s. 1216-1229.

Bibtex

@article{4fd5006f2ccd41dd830df7930812b2f3,
title = "Zbtb20 Defines a Hippocampal Neuronal Identity Through Direct Repression of Genes That Control Projection Neuron Development in the Isocortex",
abstract = "Hippocampal pyramidal neurons are important for encoding and retrieval of spatial maps and episodic memories. While previous work has shown that Zbtb20 is a cell fate determinant for CA1 pyramidal neurons, the regulatory mechanisms governing this process are not known. In this study, we demonstrate that Zbtb20 binds to genes that control neuronal subtype specification in the developing isocortex, including Cux1, Cux2, Fezf2, Foxp2, Mef2c, Rorb, Satb2, Sox5, Tbr1, Tle4, and Zfpm2. We show that Zbtb20 represses these genes during ectopic CA1 pyramidal neuron development in transgenic mice. These data reveal a novel regulatory mechanism by which Zbtb20 suppresses the acquisition of an isocortical fate during archicortical neurogenesis to ensure commitment to a CA1 pyramidal neuron fate. We further show that the expression pattern of Zbtb20 is evolutionary conserved in the fetal human hippocampus, where it is complementary to the expression pattern of the Zbtb20 target gene Tbr1. Therefore, the disclosed Zbtb20-mediated transcriptional repressor mechanism may be involved in development of the human archicortex.",
author = "Nielsen, {Jakob V} and Mads Thomassen and Kjeld M{\o}llg{\aa}rd and Jens Noraberg and Jensen, {Niels A}",
year = "2014",
month = may,
doi = "10.1093/cercor/bhs400",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "1216--1229",
journal = "Cerebral Cortex",
issn = "1047-3211",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Zbtb20 Defines a Hippocampal Neuronal Identity Through Direct Repression of Genes That Control Projection Neuron Development in the Isocortex

AU - Nielsen, Jakob V

AU - Thomassen, Mads

AU - Møllgård, Kjeld

AU - Noraberg, Jens

AU - Jensen, Niels A

PY - 2014/5

Y1 - 2014/5

N2 - Hippocampal pyramidal neurons are important for encoding and retrieval of spatial maps and episodic memories. While previous work has shown that Zbtb20 is a cell fate determinant for CA1 pyramidal neurons, the regulatory mechanisms governing this process are not known. In this study, we demonstrate that Zbtb20 binds to genes that control neuronal subtype specification in the developing isocortex, including Cux1, Cux2, Fezf2, Foxp2, Mef2c, Rorb, Satb2, Sox5, Tbr1, Tle4, and Zfpm2. We show that Zbtb20 represses these genes during ectopic CA1 pyramidal neuron development in transgenic mice. These data reveal a novel regulatory mechanism by which Zbtb20 suppresses the acquisition of an isocortical fate during archicortical neurogenesis to ensure commitment to a CA1 pyramidal neuron fate. We further show that the expression pattern of Zbtb20 is evolutionary conserved in the fetal human hippocampus, where it is complementary to the expression pattern of the Zbtb20 target gene Tbr1. Therefore, the disclosed Zbtb20-mediated transcriptional repressor mechanism may be involved in development of the human archicortex.

AB - Hippocampal pyramidal neurons are important for encoding and retrieval of spatial maps and episodic memories. While previous work has shown that Zbtb20 is a cell fate determinant for CA1 pyramidal neurons, the regulatory mechanisms governing this process are not known. In this study, we demonstrate that Zbtb20 binds to genes that control neuronal subtype specification in the developing isocortex, including Cux1, Cux2, Fezf2, Foxp2, Mef2c, Rorb, Satb2, Sox5, Tbr1, Tle4, and Zfpm2. We show that Zbtb20 represses these genes during ectopic CA1 pyramidal neuron development in transgenic mice. These data reveal a novel regulatory mechanism by which Zbtb20 suppresses the acquisition of an isocortical fate during archicortical neurogenesis to ensure commitment to a CA1 pyramidal neuron fate. We further show that the expression pattern of Zbtb20 is evolutionary conserved in the fetal human hippocampus, where it is complementary to the expression pattern of the Zbtb20 target gene Tbr1. Therefore, the disclosed Zbtb20-mediated transcriptional repressor mechanism may be involved in development of the human archicortex.

U2 - 10.1093/cercor/bhs400

DO - 10.1093/cercor/bhs400

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23283686

VL - 24

SP - 1216

EP - 1229

JO - Cerebral Cortex

JF - Cerebral Cortex

SN - 1047-3211

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 47685878