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      Zygotic Vsx1 Plays a Key Role in Defining V2a Interneuron Sub-Lineage by Directly Repressing tal1 Transcription in Zebrafish

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          Abstract

          In the spinal cord, excitatory V2a and inhibitory V2b interneurons are produced together by the final division of common P2 progenitors. During V2a and V2b diversification, Tal1 is necessary and sufficient to promote V2b differentiation and Vsx2 suppresses the expression of motor neuron genes to consolidate V2a interneuron identity. The expression program of Tal1 is triggered by a Foxn4-driven regulatory network in the common P2 progenitors. Why the expression of Tal1 is inhibited in V2a interneurons at the onset of V2a and V2b sub-lineage diversification remains unclear. Since transcription repressor Vsx1 is expressed in the P2 progenitors and newborn V2a cells in zebrafish, we investigated the role of Vsx1 in V2a fate specification during V2a and V2b interneuron diversification in this species by loss and gain-of-function experiments. In vsx1 knockdown embryos or knockout Go chimeric embryos, tal1 was ectopically expressed in the presumptive V2a cells, while the generation of V2a interneurons was significantly suppressed. By contrast, in vsx1 overexpression embryos, normal expression of tal1 in the presumptive V2b cells was suppressed, while the generation of V2a interneuron was expanded. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and electrophoretic mobility shift assays in combination with core consensus sequence mutation analysis further revealed that Vsx1 can directly bind to tal1 promoter and repress tal1 transcription. These results indicate that Vsx1 can directly repress tal1 transcription and plays an essential role in defining V2a interneuron sub-lineage during V2a and V2b sub-lineage diversification in zebrafish.

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          Most cited references41

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          A Rapid Method for Directed Gene Knockout for Screening in G0 Zebrafish

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            Mind bomb is a ubiquitin ligase that is essential for efficient activation of Notch signaling by Delta.

            Lateral inhibition, mediated by Notch signaling, leads to the selection of cells that are permitted to become neurons within domains defined by proneural gene expression. Reduced lateral inhibition in zebrafish mib mutant embryos permits too many neural progenitors to differentiate as neurons. Positional cloning of mib revealed that it is a gene in the Notch pathway that encodes a RING ubiquitin ligase. Mib interacts with the intracellular domain of Delta to promote its ubiquitylation and internalization. Cell transplantation studies suggest that mib function is essential in the signaling cell for efficient activation of Notch in neighboring cells. These observations support a model for Notch activation where the Delta-Notch interaction is followed by endocytosis of Delta and transendocytosis of the Notch extracellular domain by the signaling cell. This facilitates intramembranous cleavage of the remaining Notch receptor, release of the Notch intracellular fragment, and activation of target genes in neighboring cells.
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              Skilled reaching relies on a V2a propriospinal internal copy circuit

              The precision of skilled forelimb movement has long been presumed to rely on rapid feedback corrections triggered by internally-directed copies of outgoing motor commands – but the functional relevance of inferred internal copy circuits has remained unclear. One class of spinal interneurons implicated in the control of mammalian forelimb movement, cervical propriospinal neurons (PNs), has the potential to convey an internal copy of pre-motor signals through dual innervation of forelimb-innervating motor neurons and pre-cerebellar neurons of the lateral reticular nucleus. We have examined whether the PN internal copy pathway functions in the control of goal-directed reaching. In mice, PNs include a genetically-accessible subpopulation of cervical V2a interneurons, and their targeted ablation perturbs reaching while leaving intact other elements of forelimb movement. Moreover, optogenetic activation of the PN internal copy branch recruits a rapid cerebellar feedback loop that modulates forelimb motor neuron activity and severely disrupts reaching kinematics. Our findings implicate V2a PNs as the focus of an internal copy pathway assigned to the rapid updating of motor output during reaching behavior.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Int J Mol Sci
                Int J Mol Sci
                ijms
                International Journal of Molecular Sciences
                MDPI
                1422-0067
                20 May 2020
                May 2020
                : 21
                : 10
                : 3600
                Affiliations
                [1 ]College of Life Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China; zhangqi5400@ 123456163.com (Q.Z.); haomang@ 123456zju.edu.cn (H.X.); zhaowei086@ 123456zju.edu.cn (W.Z.); 21207054@ 123456zju.edu.cn (J.Z.); 10907031@ 123456zju.edu.cn (L.S.)
                [2 ]Zhejiang Institute of Freshwater Fisheries, Huzhou 313001, China
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: luoc@ 123456zju.edu.cn
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9207-858X
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6795-0252
                Article
                ijms-21-03600
                10.3390/ijms21103600
                7279403
                32443726
                83330d98-c63c-4b47-bc51-bc8c783e0eb7
                © 2020 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 18 April 2020
                : 15 May 2020
                Categories
                Article

                Molecular biology
                v2 interneuron diversification,v2a interneuron specification,vsx1,tal1,transcriptional repression,spinal cord,zebrafish

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