An evolutionarily acquired microRNA shapes development of mammalian cortical projections

Autor: Abdulkadir Ozkan, Jeffrey D. Macklis, Peter Sarnow, Lincoln Pasquina, Theo D. Palmer, Zihuai He, Verl B Siththanandan, Jessica L Diaz, Victoria Lu, Vibhu Sahni, Mollie B. Woodworth, Suzanne Tharin, Jessica L. MacDonald, Ramesh V. Nair, Nicole Gonzalez-Nava
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
DOI: 10.1101/2020.09.08.286955
Popis: The corticospinal tract is unique to mammals and the corpus callosum is unique to placental mammals (eutherians). The emergence of these structures is thought to underpin the evolutionary acquisition of complex motor and cognitive skills. Corticospinal motor neurons (CSMN) and callosal projection neurons (CPN) are the archetypal projection neurons of the corticospinal tract and corpus callosum, respectively. Although a number of conserved transcriptional regulators of CSMN and CPN development have been identified in vertebrates, none are unique to mammals and most are co-expressed across multiple projection neuron subtypes. Here, we discover seventeen CSMN-enriched microRNAs (miRNAs), fifteen of which map to a single genomic cluster that is exclusive to eutherians. One of these, miR-409-3p, promotes CSMN subtype identity in part via repression of LMO4, a key transcriptional regulator of CPN development. In vivo, miR-409-3p is sufficient to convert deep-layer CPN into CSMN. This is the first demonstration of an evolutionarily acquired miRNA in eutherians that refines cortical projection neuron subtype development. Our findings implicate miRNAs in the eutherians’ increase in neuronal subtype and projection diversity, the anatomic underpinnings of their complex behavior.Significance StatementThe mammalian central nervous system contains unique projections from the cerebral cortex thought to underpin complex motor and cognitive skills, including the corticospinal tract and corpus callosum. The neurons giving rise to these projections - corticospinal and callosal projection neurons - develop from the same progenitors, but acquire strikingly different fates. The broad evolutionary conservation of known genes controlling cortical projection neuron fates raises the question of how the more narrowly conserved corticospinal and callosal projections evolved. We identify a microRNA cluster selectively expressed by corticospinal projection neurons and exclusive to placental mammals. One of these microRNAs promotes corticospinal fate via regulation of the callosal gene LMO4, suggesting a mechanism whereby microRNA regulation during development promotes evolution of neuronal diversity.
Databáze: OpenAIRE