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First published online 29 March 2006
doi: 10.1242/dev.02330
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results in the loss of adherens junctions in neuroepithelial cells without affecting neurogenesis in mouse neocortex
1 Department of Molecular Biology, Yokohama City University Graduate School of
Medical Science, 3-9 Fuku-ura, Kanazawa-ku, Yokohama 236-0004, Japan.
2 College of Nursing, Yokohama City University Graduate School of Medical
Science, 3-9 Fuku-ura, Kanazawa-ku, Yokohama 236-0004, Japan.
3 Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya
University, Nagoya 466-8550, Japan.
4 Laboratory for Cell Culture Development, Brain Science Institute, RIKEN,
Saitama 351-0198, Japan.
5 Pharmaceutical Development Department, Meiji Dairies Co., 540 Naruda, Odawara,
Kanagawa 250-0862, Japan.
6 National Institute for Basic Biology, National Institute of Natural Sciences
Laboratory of Neurochemistry, Center for Transgenic Animals and Plants, 5-1
Higashiyama, Myodaiji, Okazaki 444-8787, Japan.
7 Department of Molecular Genetics, Tohoku University School of Medicine,
Aoba-ku, Sendai, Miyagi 980-8575, Japan.
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: ohnos{at}med.yokohama-cu.ac.jp)
Accepted 16 February 2006
| SUMMARY |
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, one out of two aPKC members, in mouse neocortical
neurogenesis, a Nestin-Cre mediated conditional gene targeting system was
employed. In conditional aPKC
knockout mice, neuroepithelial cells of
the neocortical region lost aPKC
protein at embryonic day 15 and
demonstrated a loss of adherens junctions, retraction of apical processes and
impaired interkinetic nuclear migration that resulted in disordered
neuroepithelial tissue architecture. These results are evidence that
aPKC
is indispensable for the maintenance of adherens junctions and
may function in the regulation of adherens junction integrity upon
differentiation of neuroepithelial cells into neurons. In spite of the loss of
adherens junctions in the neuroepithelium of conditional aPKC
knockout
mice, neurons were produced at a normal rate. Therefore, we concluded that, at
least in the later stages of neurogenesis, regulation of cell cycle exit is
independent of adherens junctions.
Key words: aPKC, Cell polarity, Adherens junction, Neurogenesis, Brain
| INTRODUCTION |
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Once neurogenesis starts, neuroepithelial cells undergo asymmetric cell
division producing daughter cells with a different cell fate; one keeps the
characters of neuroepithelial cells, while the other differentiates into a
post-mitotic neuron or an intermediate progenitor, which produces two neurons
after the next cell division in the subventricular zone
(Haubensak et al., 2004
;
Miyata et al., 2004
;
Noctor et al., 2004
).
Importantly, post-mitotic neurons and intermediate progenitors lose adherens
junctions and move out from the ventricular zone. Thus, the loss of either
adherens junctions or the apical domain defined by those junctions could
represent a cue for the differentiation of neuroepithelial cells
(Kosodo et al., 2004
;
Wodarz and Huttner, 2003
). In
support of this notion, asymmetric inheritance of the components of adherens
junctions is occasionally observed with cells dividing at the apical surface
of the ventricular zone (Chenn et al.,
1998
; Manabe et al.,
2002
). However, neither the importance of adherens junctions to
differentiation nor the molecular mechanisms for differentiation-dependent
regulation of the integrity of adherens junctions in neuroepithelial cells has
been elucidated.
A subgroup of protein kinase C (PKC), atypical PKC (aPKC) regulates cell
polarity in several organisms (Macara,
2004
; Ohno, 2001
).
aPKC forms a complex with cell polarity proteins PAR3 and PAR6, localizes
predominantly at tight junctions in mammalian epithelial cells, and its kinase
activity is required for the establishment of apicobasal cell polarity and the
formation of tight junctions (Hirose et
al., 2002
; Suzuki et al.,
2001
; Yamanaka et al.,
2001
). Drosophila genetic studies have shown that aPKC,
along with PAR3 and PAR6 are responsible for junction formation in epithelial
cells and for cell fate determination in neuroblasts
(Kuchinke et al., 1998
;
Petronczki and Knoblich, 2001
;
Rolls et al., 2003
;
Wodarz et al., 2000
;
Wodarz et al., 1999
). In
mammalian neural tissues, aPKC localizes with PAR3 and PAR6 at the adherens
junctions of embryonic neuroepithelial cells
(Manabe et al., 2002
).
However, the role of aPKC during mammalian neurogenesis remains unknown.
To explore the role of aPKC in the development of mouse neocortex, we
inactivated the gene for aPKC
, one of two aPKC isotypes, by
employing a Nestin promoter and an intronic enhancer-driven Cre-mediated
conditional gene targeting system. The phenotype of the mutant mice indicates
that aPKC
is indispensable for neuroepithelial cells to form adherens
junctions and maintain cell polarity in the neuroepithelium. However,
aPKC
is not required for cell cycle exit and the subsequent radial
migration in developing neocortex.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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gene in which exon 5 was
flanked by loxP sequences were generated by homologous recombination
(Hashimoto et al., 2005
Detection of ß-galactosidase activity
Any ß-galactosidase expressed from Rosa26R gene that lost the
suppressor neo-cassette following cre-mediated recombination was detected in
frozen sections fixed using 4% PFA for 10 minutes by staining with X-gal
according to the standard protocol. The Nestin-Cre transgene bears the
lacZ gene; however, the expression of ß-galactosidase from this
lacZ gene was negligible compared with that from the Rosa26R
gene (data not shown).
Western blot analysis
Telencephalic vesicles from E13.5 or E15.5 embryos were cut out in ice-cold
PBS, the meninges removed and vesicles homogenized in 1 ml of SDS-PAGE sample
buffer. Samples were appropriately diluted to provide equal protein amounts
and used for SDS-PAGE. Western blot analysis was performed according to
standard protocols using the following antibodies: anti-aPKC
antibody
1/1000 (clone 23, BD); anti-aPKC
antibody 1/1000 (rabbit, Santa Cruz);
and anti-ß-actin 1/2000 (AC-15, Sigma). For secondary antibodies,
horseradish peroxidase was conjugated with anti-rabbit or - mouse IgG 1/2000
(goat, Amersham). Enzyme activity was detected using an ECL system (Amersham)
and luminescence was quantified using a FUJI Las 3000 luminescence image
analyzer (Fuji Photo Film, Tokyo). All images were arranged and labeled using
Photoshop 7.0 (Adobe Systems).
Immunostaining
Embryos were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA)/phosphate-buffered saline
(PBS) for paraffin wax-embedded sectioning (5-6 µm). When required, BrdU
was injected intraperitoneally into pregnant mice at the time points indicated
in the text. Paraffin sections were hydrolyzed and heated at 120°C for 20
minutes in 10 mM sodium citrate (pH 6.0). For staining with MAP2, CSPG
neurogenin 2 antibody, embryos were frozen directly in OCT compound and
sectioned at 8 µm. Frozen sections were then fixed with a methanol/acetone
1:1 mix at -20°C for 10 minutes and air-dried. Immunostaining was
performed according to standard protocols using 10% normal goat serum in TBST
[10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 150 mM NaCl, 0.05% Tween 20] as a blocking reagent,
and primary and secondary antibodies were diluted in 0.1% BSA/1.5% normal goat
serum/TBST, as follows. Primary antibodies: affinity purified
anti-aPKC
rabbit antibody 1/1000 (
3)
(Suzuki et al., 2001
);
anti-N-cadherin 1/1000 (clone 32, BD); anti-ß-catenin 1/1000 (clone 14,
BD); anti ZO-1 1/1000 (clone ZO1-1A12, Zymed); anti-PAR-6ß 1/500 (BC32AP)
(Yamanaka et al., 2003
);
anti-ASIP/PAR-3 1/1000 (C2-3) (Hirose et
al., 2002
); anti-
-tubulin 1/500 (rabbit, Sigma); anti-BrdU
1/1000 (clone 2B1, MBL); anti-phospho-histone H3 1/1000 (rabbit, Upstate);
anti-ßIII-tubulin 1/2000 (clone TuJ1, Babco); anti-Ki67 1/200 (rabbit,
Novocastra); anti-CSPG 1/1000 (clone CS-56, Sigma); anti-MAP2 (clone HM-1;
Sigma) and anti-neurogenin 2 1/50 (clone 5C6)
(Lo et al., 2002
). Secondary
antibodies: Cy3-conjugated anti-rabbit or -mouse IgG 1/2000 (goat, Amersham);
Alexa488-conjugated anti-rabbit or -mouse IgG (goat, Molecular Probes); and
TOPRO-3 1/100 (Molecular probes). DAPI (2.5 µg/ml, Sigma) was included in
the final wash buffer (TBST) for nuclear staining. For immunohistochemistry,
biotinylated secondary anti-mouse IgG antibodies 1/1000 (goat, Vector) were
detected using a Vectastain Elite ABC kit (Vector). Images were captured using
a BX50 fluorescent microscope (Olympus) equipped with a CCD camera
(Photometrics) or an LSM510 (Zeiss). All images were arranged and labeled
using Photoshop 7.0 (Adobe Systems). Some paraffin sections were stained using
Carazzi's hematoxylin (Muto Pure Chemicals) and Eosin B (Sigma) or with 0.5%
Cresyl Violet.
Electron microscopy
Samples were fixed in 1% glutaraldehyde/4% PFA in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate
buffer overnight at 4°C, post-fixed with 2% osmium in 0.1 M sodium
cacodylate buffer for 2 hours at 4°C, and processed for Epon embedding.
Sections were examined at 75 kV using an H-7500 transmission electron
microscope (Hitachi).
Slice culture analysis
Coronal slices of E15.5 embryonic telencephalon (200-300 µm) were
prepared and cultured in collagen gel, as previously described
(Miyata et al., 2004
). To
examine cell shapes, dissected telencephalon was immersed for 10 seconds in
DiI suspension (
1 mg/ml culture medium), DiI was deposited on the pial
surface prior to making the slices and the dye was left to diffuse for more
than 2 hours. Time-lapse photographs were taken by hand.
| RESULTS |
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gene
allele lacking exon 9
(PKC
9/
9)
mice show lethality at an early embryonic stage
(Soloff et al., 2004
in neocortical neurogenesis, we generated
Nestin-Cre-mediated conditional aPKC
knockout mice (aPKC
cKO).
In the conditional aPKC
allele
(PKC
floxed), exon 5 of the
aPKC
gene is flanked by loxP sequences. As exon 5 is 86 bp
long, deletion results in a frame-shift mutation upstream of the kinase
domain-coding sequence (Hashimoto et al.,
2005
5) by Cre
recombinase-mediated recombination. With the Nestin-Cre allele, Cre
recombinase express under the control of the rat Nestin promoter and intronic
enhancer (T.S., unpublished). To generate aPKC
cKOs carrying the
aPKC
floxed allele in homo and Nestin-Cre allele in
hetero (PKC
floxed/floxed; Nestin-Cre), we
bred mice carrying the aPKC
floxed allele in homo
(PKC
floxed/floxed) and mice carrying the
aPKC
floxed allele in hetero and Nestin-Cre allele
in hetero (PKC
floxed/+; Nestin-Cre).
PKC
floxed/+; Nestin-Cre mice found as
littermates of the aPKC
cKO mice are viable, fertile and show no
obvious abnormalities, similar to the heterozygous aPKC
mutant
(PKC
5/+) mice (data not
shown) that were used as controls for most of the experiments presented in
this manuscript. Genotypes and numbers of newborn pups obtained from this
breeding program were 21 for aPKC
cKO
(PKC
floxed/floxed; Nestin-Cre),
13 for PKC
floxed/floxed, 25 for
PKC
floxed/+; Nestin-Cre and 19
for PKC
floxed/+, most fitting the expected ratio of
1:1:1:1. Although for some unknown reason the number of PKC
floxed/floxed pups was somewhat lower than the expected
value, comparable numbers of aPKC
cKO (PKC
floxed/floxed; Nestin-Cre) and control
(PKC
floxed/+; Nestin-Cre) pups were
obtained; indicating that the most aPKC
cKO mice can survive during
embryonic and early postnatal days. These aPKC
cKO mice were healthy
and indistinguishable from littermates up to 5 days after birth, although
after this point growth retardation started to be evident. Thereafter, all
aPKC
cKO mice died within 1 month of birth and all displayed
hydrocephalus (21/21, 100%).
To test the tissue specificity of the Nestin-Cre-mediated recombination,
Nestin-Cre transgenic mice were crossed with Rosa26R reporter mice in which a
floxed neo cassette interrupts the ubiquitous expression of the
lacZ gene (Soriano,
1999
). In Rosa26R mouse embryos carrying the Nestin-Cre transgene,
Cre-mediated recombination monitored by the expression of ß-galactosidase
activity was specifically detected in the central nervous system of E15.5
embryos, including in the telencephalon, diencephalon, mesencephalon,
metencephalon, myeloncephalon and spinal cord. In the telencephalon,
recombination was detected in the ganglionic eminence and rostral neocortial
region, but no recombination was evident at this stage in the caudal
neocortical region, including the hippocampus
(Fig. 1A).
We then tested if aPKC
protein was abolished in embryonic
telencephalon of aPKC
cKO mice. Western blot analysis using a specific
antibody against aPKC
demonstrated a substantial reduction of
aPKC
protein from telencephalic vesicles at E15.5, while the protein
was still present at E13.5 (Fig.
1B, upper). Remnant aPKC
protein would have originated
from the caudal region of the telencephalon, where Cre-mediated recombination
did not proceed even at E15.5 (Fig.
1A). As the activity of Cre recombinase monitored by lacZ
expression from the modified Rosa locus had been detected in a large part of
E13.5 brain (data not shown), the subtle decrease in the amount of
aPKC
protein at E13.5 might indicate the relatively low susceptibility
of the aPKC
locus to Cre recombinase or the long half-life of
aPKC
protein.
As previously reported, aPKC
protein was highly concentrated in the
apical ridge of the ventricular zone, predominantly in the adherens junctions
of neuroepithelial cells (Manabe et al.,
2002
). When localization of aPKC
was examined under
immunofluorescent microscopy, aPKC
protein was undetectable in the
anterior neocortical region of aPKC
cKO mouse embryos at E15.5, while
apical localization of this protein was obvious in control embryos
(Fig. 5A,B).
|
and
aPKC
(Suzuki et al.,
2003
comprises a single protein with a
molecular mass of
70 kDa, aPKC
has two variants, at 70 kDa and 55
kDa. The 55 kDa variant is called PKM
and lacks an N-terminal regulatory
domain including PB1, a pseudosubstrate and a cysteine-rich domain
(Hernandez et al., 2003
and aPKC
, which are found in a variety of
tissues, PKM
is expressed predominantly in the brain
(Akimoto et al., 1994
variants in the
aPKC
cKO telencephalon, Western blot analysis was employed using
antibody recognizing all aPKCs (aPKC
, aPKC
and PKM
). A 70
kDa protein detected in controls was greatly reduced in aPKC
cKO
embryos at E15.5 (Fig. 1B,
middle), indicating that the expression level of aPKC
in the
telencephalon is rather low in aPKC
cKO embryos, and probably also in
control embryos. PKM
was clearly detected in E15.5 control
telencephalon, and protein levels remained unchanged in aPKC
cKO
telencephalon. These results indicate that in embryonic telencephalon,
aPKC
and PKM
are mainly expressed, and that the loss of
aPKC
does not affect protein levels of aPKC
variants.
Loss of aPKC
causes disruption of neuroepithelial tissue architecture in the telencephalon
To examine the effects of aPKC
disruption on the gross morphology
of the neocortical region, histological analysis was initially performed under
light microscopy. At E13.5, when the expression of aPKC
protein was
not severely impaired, no morphological abnormalities were observed in the
neocortical regions of aPKC
cKO embryos (data not shown).
Abnormalities became evident at E15.5, when aPKC
protein in this
region decreased to undetectable levels. In control embryos, the ventricular
zone comprised uniformly packed neuroepithelial cells and had a smooth
ventricular surface (Fig. 2A).
By contrast, the ventricular surface in aPKC
cKO embryos was rough and
neuroepithelial cells were loosely packed. The ventricular zone was thus
barely distinguishable from the subventricular zone
(Fig. 2E). Nevertheless, the
subplate and cortical plate were comparable with these layers in control
embryos, and little abnormality was apparent in the ventricular zone at the
caudal neocortical region where apical localization of aPKC
protein
was maintained (Fig. 5E, data
not shown). Morphological abnormalities became more evident at E16.5. The
ventricular and subventricular zones were severely disorganized, and the
ventricular, subventricular and intermediate zones were difficult to
distinguish (Fig. 2C,G). Gross
death of neuroepithelial cells was considered unlikely as the primary cause of
this morphological abnormality, as no significant increase in the number of
cells undergoing apoptosis was observed (see Fig. S1 in the supplementary
material) and the total number of proliferating cells as assessed by the
number of cells in S-phase was not significantly changed in the neocortical
region of aPKC
cKO embryos (Fig.
3C). Instead, a dispersion of neuroepithelial cells into the outer
layers, and the subventricular and intermediate zones might have caused these
abnormalities. This possibility is supported by the unusual distribution of
TuJ1-positive differentiated neurons. In control embryos, TuJ1-positive cells
were for the most part excluded from the ventricular and subventricular zones
(Menezes and Luskin, 1994
).
However, in aPKC
cKO embryos, TuJ1 staining was found in all layers of
the neocortical region (Fig.
2H). To identify the somata of TuJ1-positive differentiated
neurons, we stained sections with an antibody for the proliferation marker
Ki67 and TuJ1. In such staining, Ki67-negative nuclei surrounded by TuJ1
staining represented somata of differentiated neurons found in the most apical
region in aPKC
cKO embryos (Fig.
2H'). In contrast to the severe disorganization of
ventricular-side layers of the neocortical region, pial-side layers comprising
the subplate and cortical plate were unaffected, and staining with chondroitin
sulfate proteoglycans and MAP2, as markers for the subplate and cortical
plate, respectively, yielded a pattern indistinguishable from that in control
embryos (Fig. 2C,G; see Fig. S2
in the supplementary material). The abnormality was more prominent in the
ganglionic eminence, where the loss of aPKC
took place earlier than in
the neocortical region. Typically, fusion of the right and left medial
ganglionic eminences was observed at E13.5, and at E16.5 irregular protrusions
formed at the ventricular surface and the anterior horn of the lateral
ventricle was filled with neuroepithelial cells and neurons
(Fig. 2F, see Fig. S3 in the
supplementary material). These results suggest that aPKC
is
indispensable for neuroepithelial cells to form pseudostratified epithelium in
the ventricular zone.
|
cKO embryos. One such characteristic is interkinetic nuclear migration, a cell
cycle-dependent translocation of the nucleus along the radial axis of the
ventricular zone. Upon cell cycle progression, nuclei of S-phase cells located
deep (pial side) in the ventricular zone move towards the ventricular surface,
where cells undergo mitosis (Jacobsen,
1991
cKO neocortical
regions with regard to the ratio of BrdU-positive nuclei to total nuclei in
the defined area (Fig. 3C). In
addition, most BrdU-positive nuclei were restricted to within the ventricular
zone and subventricular zone in both cases
(Fig. 3D). However, when
positions of BrdU-positive nuclei within the ventricular zone and
subventricular zone were compared, differences were evident. In control
embryos, BrdU-positive nuclei were concentrated in the middle layer of the
ventricular zone (layer 2 in Fig.
3A,D), but were dispersed throughout the ventricular zone and
subventricular zone in aPKC
cKO embryos, showing a slight tendency to
concentrate on the ventricle side (layer 3,
Fig. 3B,D). Mitotic cell nuclei
were then labeled by immunostaining using the phospho-histone H3 antibody,
with the majority being located at the ventricular surface in control embryos,
while a relatively minor population was found in the non-surface area of the
ventricular zone and subventricular zone and the intermediate zone
(Miyata et al., 2004
cKO embryos, with the majority found in
non-surface areas of the ventricular zone and subventricular zone
(Fig. 3E). These results
indicate that proper interkinetic nuclear migration of neuroepithelial cells
is impaired by the loss of aPKC
; thereby, each cell is at a random
position in the cell cycle.
Another common feature of cells in pseudostratified epithelium is the
presence of basal and apical cellular processes extending to the pial and
ventricular surfaces, respectively (Astrom
and Webster, 1991
; Miyata et
al., 2001
). Although the length of each process changes depending
on the interkinetic nuclear migration, centrosomes are always anchored at the
tip of the apical process, except in mitotic round-up cells, so centrosomes
are apically localized in pseudostratified epithelium
(Astrom and Webster, 1991
). In
aPKC
cKO embryos, centrosomes were dispersed throughout the
ventricular zone and subventricular zone with minor apical localization,
indicating a considerable degree of cell-shape changes
(Fig. 4A). When neuroepithelial
cells in control embryos were labeled applying DiI from the pial surface, most
cells displayed cellular processes extending to both the pial and ventricular
surfaces (left panels in Fig.
4B,C). In aPKC
cKO embryos, most apical cellular processes
were shortened and detached from the ventricular surface (right panels in
Fig. 4B,C).
|
cKO slice cultures revealed that
apical cellular processes gradually retracted after detaching from the
ventricular surface (Fig. 4C).
Shortened apical cellular processes represent the normal characteristic of
some fractions, such as neuroepithelial and intermediate progenitors that will
divide at the subventricular zone (Miyata
et al., 2004
cKO embryos, the majority of
neuroepithelial cells (55 out of 60 cells observed) displayed apical processes
detached from the ventricular surface. The retraction of apical processes may
also occur upon the production of intermediate progenitors
(Haubensak et al., 2004
protein
is essential for the maintenance of apical cellular processes.
|
results in the disappearance of neuroepithelial adherens junctions
, N-cadherin,
ß-catenin and ZO-1 are localized
(Chenn and Walsh, 2002
protein presumably causes abnormalities of the adherens
junctions, together with the abnormalities in the neuroepithelium as described
above. To test this possibility, formation of adherens junctions in the
neuroepithelium of control and aPKC
cKO embryos was assessed. We first
examined the localization of ß-catenin, which was highly concentrated in
dot-like structures located on the ventricular surface of control embryos
(Fig. 5A,C). In aPKC
cKO embryos, such localization of ß-catenin was rarely seen on the
ventricular surface, even though weak staining around cell bodies was
maintained (Fig. 5B,D).
Localization of other components of adherens junction, such as N-cadherin and
the aPKC-binding polarity proteins PAR3 and PAR6ß, was also severely
impaired in aPKC
cKO embryos (see Fig. S4 in the supplementary
material). These results clearly indicate the loss of adherens junctions in
the neuroepithelium of aPKC
cKO embryos. We then used electron
microscopy to confirm the disappearance of adherens junctions. Typical
adherens junctions were not identified at either the apical surface or the
deeper area of the ventricular zone and subventricular zone in the rostral
neocortical region of aPKC
cKO embryos
(Fig. 5F,H), but were always
found as continuous electron dense lines at the apical ridge of
neuroepithelium in the caudal neocortical region
(Fig. 5E,G), where aPKC
protein was still present at E15.5. Fragmented adherens junctions were
occasionally observed on the ventricular surface in aPKC
cKO embryos
(Fig. 5F,H, arrow), possibly
corresponding to the remnant dot-like structures stained with ß-catenin
(Fig. 5D, arrows).
Interestingly, these structures were not stained with aPKC
antibody
(Fig. 5B). Loss of aPKC
protein may thus precede the disappearance of adherens junctions;
nevertheless, no continuous intact adherens junctions were found without the
association of aPKC
, indicating that the integrity of adherens
junctions depends almost totally on the presence of aPKC
. Loss of
adherens junctions is most probably a cell-autonomous effect of aPKC
loss, as adherens junctions were unaffected in a caudal region of neocortex at
E15.5, where aPKC
protein was still present, even though this region
was adjacent to the more rostral affected region.
Disruption of aPKC
does not affect neurogenesis and radial migration
Previous studies have shown that aPKC is involved in the cell fate
determination of neuroblasts in the Drosophila central nervous system
(Wodarz et al., 2000
,
Rolls et al., 2003
). In
mammals, loss of adherens junctions presumably causes the loss of polarity cue
in neuroepithelial cells, and, depending on asymmetric cell division, affects
neurogenesis (Wodarz and Huttner et al., 2003). In the neocortex of
aPKC
cKO mice at postnatal day (P) 3, lateral ventricles were swollen
as in the hydrocephalus, but no serious abnormalities in the laminated
structure of the neocortex were found (Fig.
6B). The apparently normal structure of the neocortex at P3
suggests that neurogenesis and the radial migration that follows are
unaffected by the loss of aPKC
. To further test this possibility,
neurons produced at around E15.5 or E17.5 were labeled with BrdU, and the
position of these neurons in the neocortex was examined at P3. In both control
and aPKC
cKO neocortex, neurons labeled at E17.5 were located in the
outermost layer of the neocortex adjacent to the marginal zone (layers II or
III of mature neocortex) at P3, and neurons labeled at E15.5 were located
slightly closer (Fig. 6C,D).
These results indicate that radial migration was unaffected in aPKC
cKO mice; moreover, no obvious differences were identified in the numbers of
labeled cells, possibly reflecting the rate of neurogenesis at E15.5 or E17.5.
However, directly comparing numbers of labeled neurons was difficult because
of the enlarged shape of the aPKC
cKO mouse telencephalon. To clarify
this point, the rate of neurogenesis was monitored by measuring the cell cycle
exit rate (Chenn and Walsh,
2002
), as follows. BrdU was loaded at E15.5 and brains were fixed
at E16.5 for immunostaining using antibodies against BrdU and Ki67, a protein
marker for proliferating cells. Ki67-negative cells in the BrdU-positive cell
cohort thus correspond to cells that have exited the cell cycle and
differentiated in the period between E15.5 and E16.5
(Fig. 7A,B). The ratio of
Ki67-negative/BrdU-positive cells to all BrdU-positive cells was about 50% in
the neocortical region of both control and aPKC
cKO embryos
(Fig. 7C). We then compared the
expression of neurogenin 2, an early differentiation marker, which is
essential for the commitment to neuronal linage
(Kageyama et al., 2005
;
Ross et al., 2003
). Again, no
significant changes in the ratio of neurogenin 2-positive nuclei were observed
among the total number of nuclei in the ventricular zone and subventricular
zone of E15.5 aPKC
cKO and control embryos
(Fig. 7D-F). Notably, the
number of GFAP-positive glial cells in the neocortex at E15.5, E17.5 and P3
remained unchanged with the loss of aPKC
(data not shown). Moreover,
neuroepithelial cells from the neocortical region of aPKC
cKO embryos
at E15.5 or E16.5 proliferated in suspension culture forming neurospheres, and
these cells retained the potential to differentiate into neurons and glia
(data not shown). Taken together, these results indicate that aPKC
is
not essential for the neurogenesis of neocortical development, at least in the
later stages after E15.5.
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
gene in mouse neocortex causes the loss of adherens
junctions in neuroepithelial cells. Adherens junctions were unaffected until
E14.5 in the neocortical region of aPKC
cKO embryos, as aPKC
protein was still present until this time, supporting the proposition that the
loss of adherens junctions is the cell-autonomous effect caused by the
disappearance of aPKC
. Because a zebrafish mutant heart and
soul (has), in which aPKC
is disrupted at the C-terminal
region, has been reported to cause the disappearance of apical ZO-1 or F-actin
staining in the retina, the role of aPKC for adherens junctions seems to be
conserved (Horne-Badovinac et al.,
2001
gene in mouse neocortex after E15.5, providing a clear
contrast to the previously reported mutants.
Adherens junctions is not required for mammalian neurogenesis
The loss of adherens junctions is a natural cellular event observed when
neuroepithelial cells differentiate into neurons or a certain cohort of
progenitor, intermediate progenitor. Recent reports have described that
adherens junction-free progenitors dividing at the subventricular zone or
intermediate zone undergo symmetric cell divisions producing two neurons in
the most cases (Miyata et al.,
2004
; Noctor et al.,
2004
). Adherens junctions play a crucial role in the maintenance
of proliferative status in a variety of stem cells, including
Drosophila germinal cells, mouse hematopoietic stem cells and
epidermal cells by maintaining the stem cell niche
(Fuchs et al., 2004
;
Song et al., 2002
;
Yamashita et al., 2003
). For
example, expression levels of adherens junction components are important for
generating hair follicles and the inactivation of
-catenin impairs hair
follicle morphogenesis and adherens junctions
(Jamora et al., 2003
;
Vasioukhin et al., 2001
). This
has been predicted to remain true for neuroepithelial cells, the neural stem
cells. However, if adherens junctions play a crucial role in the proliferative
status in neuroepithelial cells, loss of adherens junctions may cause temporal
overproduction of neurons, resulting in a considerable decrease in
neuroepithelial cell numbers. In fact, loss of adherens junctions has also
been reported in conditional ß-catenin knockout and Lgl1
knockout mice (Klezovitch et al.,
2004
; Machon et al.,
2003
). In such cases, decreases or increases in cell proliferation
rate have been reported in addition to the disorganization of the
neuroepithelium in the neocortical region or ganglionic eminence. However, the
present results indicate that adherens junctions are not required for either
maintenance of proliferative status or cell cycle exit in the mouse neocortex,
at least at the late stage of neurogenesis. This is supported by three
observations. First, the total number of BrdU-labeled S-phase cells was not
altered in neocortical regions where adherens junctions were lost. Second, the
cell cycle exit rate reflecting the rate of neural cell differentiation and
the neurogenin 2-positive cell rate were also unaffected. Third, neurons
produced 2 days after the loss of adherens junctions (E17.5) were found in
normal positions in the laminated neocortex after birth. These different
effects of the loss of adherens junctions on cell proliferation may reflect
the function of ß-catenin and Lgl1, rather than the maintenance of the
adherens junction structure, as ß-catenin acts as a component of the
transcription factor required for induction of Wnt signaling-dependent cell
proliferation (Chenn and Walsh,
2002
), and Lgl is characterized as a tumor suppressor gene
(Bilder et al., 2000
). Adherens
junctions were unaffected until E14.5 in the neocortical region of
aPKC
cKO embryos, as aPKC
protein was still present until this
time. Thus, adherens junctions might play essential roles in the maintenance
of proliferative status or cell cycle exit of neuroepithelial cells at stages
earlier than E14.5.
aPKC
regulates integrity of adherens junctions
Although the presence of adherens junctions does not affect neurogenesis as
discussed above, the integrity of adherens junction may be regulated by a
mechanism that accords to cell fate determination. One possibility is that the
orientation of the cleavage plate regulates adherens junction integrity. When
the cleavage plate is oriented parallel to the ventricular surface, a daughter
cell located distal to the surface may inherit few or no adherens junctions
(Chenn et al., 1998
;
Manabe et al., 2002
). However,
recent studies have revealed that this type of cell division is rather rare in
developing mouse neocortex (Haydar et al.,
2003
) and that only one daughter cell might inherit adherens
junctions even when the cleavage plate is oriented perpendicular to the
ventricular surface (Kosodo et al.,
2004
). In this case, differentiation of neuroepithelial cells into
intermediate progenitors or neurons may trigger the destruction of adherens
junctions. Our finding that the inactivation of aPKC
causes a loss of
adherens junctions suggests the involvement of this protein kinase in such a
differentiation-dependent regulation of adherens junctions.
The molecular mechanisms underlying the regulation of adherens junctions by
aPKC
are largely unknown. In epithelial cells, aPKC regulates the
integrity of tight junctions with its binding partners, PAR3 and PAR6
(Macara, 2004
;
Ohno, 2001
). PAR6 binds to
Pals1, Lgl1 and Lgl2, and last two are the substrate for aPKC
(Hurd et al., 2003
;
Plant et al., 2003
;
Yamanaka et al., 2003
). PAR3
is also phosphorylated by aPKC
, with the phosphorylation of these
proteins being a crucial step for the establishment and probably also for the
maintenance of tight junctions in epithelial cells
(Hirose et al., 2002
;
Nagai-Tamai et al., 2002
;
Yamanaka et al., 2003
).
Although neuroepithelial cells lose tight junctions in their early embryonic
stages, the remaining adherens junctions retain many of these aPKC-binding
proteins (Aaku-Saraste et al.,
1996
; Astrom and Webster,
1991
). Some common molecular mechanisms may therefore act in the
establishment of epithelial tight junctions and in the maintenance of
neuroepithelial adherens junctions. This notion is in part supported by the
observation that Lgl1, Pals1 and PAR3, as well as aPKC play crucial roles in
the maintenance of adherens junctions in the neuroepithelium of the mouse
telencephalon or zebrafish retina
(Klezovitch et al., 2004
;
Wei et al., 2004
;
Wei and Malicki, 2002
).
The role of aPKC
on mammalian neurogenesis
In Drosophila neuroblasts, aPKC regulates cell fate by modifying
cell polarity and proliferation (Rolls et
al., 2003
; Wodarz et al.,
2000
). As Drosophila neuroblasts lose adherens junctions
upon delamination from the neuroectoderm, these functions of aPKC are
independent of the maintenance of adherens junctions. Mouse aPKCs could also
display such adherens junction-independent functions to regulate the
differentiation in neuroepithelial cells. As aPKC
cKO embryos
exhibited no significant alteration of neurogenesis as described above, the
argument could be made that another aPKC member protein, aPKC
, may
display such functions. However, a major form of aPKC
expressed in
neural tissue of both aPKC
cKO and control embryos is PKM
, which
lacks the N-terminal PB1 domain essential for interaction with PAR6
(Hirano et al., 2005
;
Suzuki et al., 2001
;
Wilson et al., 2003
). The
functions of PKM
might thus be more restricted than intact aPKC
or
aPKC
. In any case, a definitive answer for the issue of whether aPKCs
regulate neural cell differentiation in mammals will be provided by analyzing
the phenotype of aPKC
/aPKC
double-knockout mice.
Radial migration was not significantly affected in aPKC
cKO
embryos, and the radial glia scaffold comprising the basal cellular processes
of neuroepithelial cells was normally aligned, even though the apical process
was retracted (Fig. 4B,C). In
contrast to the apical processes, in which integrity was totally dependent on
adherens junctions, basal processes were probably maintained by interactions
with the basal lamina at the pial surface and with differentiated neurons
located in the subplate and cortical plate. Conversely, some reports have
indicated the involvement of aPKCs in neural cell migration
(Jossin et al., 2003
;
Solecki et al., 2004
).
Although the present data show little contribution of aPKC
to radial
migration, a signaling pathway to regulate cell migration could be driven by
PKM
and residual amounts of aPKC
found in the aPKC
cKO
embryonic brain.
The loss of aPKC
eventually causes brain malformation characterized
by hydrocephalus and loss of the ependymal layer along with most of the
striatum, which becomes prominent at P3 or later
(Fig. 6B). The overall
structure of the neocortex was relatively well maintained even in the absence
of the ependymal layer, probably because neural fiber enriched layers such as
cortical plate, subplate and intermediate zone defend neocortical cell layers
against the gross disorganization observed in the striatum. In other words,
brain malformation in aPKC
cKO mice indicates that the maintenance of
neuroepithelial tissue architecture by adherens junctions is essential for
mechanical support of the developing brain, although the process is largely
dispensable for neural cell differentiation and migration in the late
embryonic stages. Moreover, appropriate regulation of aPKC
activity
could contribute to morphogenesis in brain ontogeny.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
Supplementary material for this article is available at http://dev.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/132/9/1735/DC1
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