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First published online May 23, 2008
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.016725
1 Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Parkville, Victoria 3050,
Australia.
2 Department of Medical Biology, University of Melbourne, Parkville 3010,
Victoria, Australia.
3 Howard Florey Institute, Parkville, 3010 Victoria, Australia.
* Authors for correspondence (e-mails: avoss{at}wehi.edu.au; tthomas{at}wehi.edu.au)
Accepted 18 April 2008
| SUMMARY |
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Key words: Neuronal migration, Cerebral cortex, Radial glia, Reelin, Cell adhesion, Ras signalling pathway, Mouse
| INTRODUCTION |
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The ECM is a network of proteins that forms a scaffold providing mechanical
support, but ECM proteins also are essential inducers of cell signalling. The
ECM contains specialised components in defined regions specifically for cell
signalling. For example, ECM within the marginal zones of the cerebral cortex
and the cerebellum contains reelin, which regulates neuronal migration
(D'Arcangelo et al., 1995
).
Other ECM proteins such as laminin, fibronectin and collagen, are produced by
the neuroepithelium throughout neurogenesis
(Liesi, 1985
;
Sheppard et al., 1991
;
Stewart and Pearlman, 1987
;
Thomas and Dziadek, 1993b
).
Here we provide functional evidence that C3G (Rapgef1, Grf2), a molecule that
transduces signals from ECM proteins, is essential for cortical neuron
migration.
C3G is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for small GTPases of the Ras
family (Knudsen et al., 1994
;
Tanaka et al., 1994
). C3G can
be activated by a number of extracellular signals including integrin binding
(Arai et al., 2001
;
Arai et al., 1999
;
Uemura and Griffin, 1999
) and
reelin stimulation (Ballif et al.,
2004
). Phosphorylation of C3G and complex formation with the
adaptor protein Crk are necessary for C3G activation
(Ichiba et al., 1997
). The
Crk-C3G complex translocates to the cytoplasmic membrane
(Ichiba et al., 1997
), where
C3G stimulates GTP exchange predominantly on Rap1
(Ohba et al., 2001
), thereby
activating signalling through Rap1. C3G regulates migration in fibroblasts
(Ohba et al., 2001
;
Voss et al., 2003
) and is
essential for filopodia formation and cytoskeletal changes in fibroblasts
(Radha et al., 2007
). In
addition, C3G regulates neural precursor proliferation in the developing
cerebral cortex (Voss et al.,
2006
).
We report here that during the development of the cerebral cortex, C3G is essential for normal neuronal migration.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Antibodies
Primary antibodies were directed against BrdU (Bio-Science Products 010198,
1:10), β-tubulin type III (Promega G7121, 1:2000), calretinin (Chemicon
AB5054, 1:100), Emx1 (Chan et al.,
2001
), laminin (Chemicon AB2034, 1:1000), Map2 (Sigma M4403,
1:200), reelin (Abcam ab18570, 1:1000), RC2 (from Miyuki Yamamoto via the
Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, 1:200), C3G (Santa Cruz sc-869 and
sc-15359, 1:500) and phospho-tyrosine (BD Transduction Laboratories PY-20,
1:1000). Secondary antibodies were Vector Laboratories BA-1400, Vector
FI-2020, Molecular Probes A-21124, A-11004, A-11035, A-11029, A-11003,
A-11001, Southern Biotechnology 710003 and Jackson ImmunoResearch
111-156-003.
Immunoprecipitation, immunoblotting and affinity purification
Rap1 activation assays were conducted as described previously
(Voss et al., 2006
).
Immunoblotting was performed as described
(Voss et al., 2003
;
Voss et al., 2006
). C3G
immunoprecipitations were performed as described
(Ballif et al., 2004
). Briefly,
cortical neurons were washed with ice-cold PBS, lysed in 400 µl nRIPA [0.15
M NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% SDS, 1% sodium deoxycholate, 10 mM sodium
phosphate (pH 7.4), 2 mM EDTA, 14 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 50 mM NaF, 2 mM
Na3VO4, 1 mM phenylarsine oxide and one complete
protease inhibitor tablet per 40 ml]. Lysates were clarified by centrifugation
and then precleared with a cocktail of protein A/protein G sepharose [protein
A (G) sepharose 4 fast flow, GE Health Care]. Lysates were mixed with 20 µl
protein G sepharose and 2 µg anti-C3G (sc-15359) antibody. Samples were
incubated for 2.5 hours with agitation at 4°C. Resin was washed three
times with 0.8 ml nRIPA buffer. Samples were eluted by boiling in 30 µl
2x sample buffer [4% SDS, 124 mM Tris-HCl (pH 6.8), 0.1% Bromophenol
Blue, 20% glycerol, 200 mM DTT).
In situ hybridisation and immunofluorescence
In situ hybridisation and BrdU detection were performed as described
(Thomas et al., 2000
).
Immunofluorescence on sections was carried out as described
(Voss et al., 2003
).
Immunofluorescence on cultured cells was performed as described
(Merson et al., 2006
;
Voss et al., 2000
).
Cell culture and cell transfection
Neural precursor cells were cultured in neural stem cell proliferation
medium as previously described (Merson et
al., 2006
). Human 293T cells were transfected with 4.5 µg of
either pCRL [reelin expression vector; gift from T. Curran
(D'Arcangelo et al., 1997
)] or
pCDNA3.1 (empty parental vector; mock) using FuGENE (Roche). Medium was
replaced 24 hours post-transfection with neural differentiation medium (as
neural stem cell proliferation medium but without Fgf2, and without Egf).
Conditioned medium was recovered 48 hours post-transfection. Cortical neurons
were isolated and cultured as described
(Herrick and Cooper, 2002
).
Briefly, E16.5 cerebral hemispheres were dissociated enzymatically and
mechanically, passed through a sieve, collected by centrifugation and plated
onto poly-L-lysine-coated tissue culture plates in neural
differentiation medium with 1% foetal bovine serum.
Organotypic brain slice cultures and confocal time-lapse imaging
Replication-incompetent enhanced GFP (eGFP)-expressing retrovirus was
produced from a stably transfected packaging cell line, 293gp NIT-GFP (gift
from F. Gage, Salk Institute, La Jolla, CA). Cells were transiently
transfected with pVSV-G (Palmer et al.,
1999
), the supernatant harvested after 48 hours and concentrated
by ultracentrifugation at 53,000 g for 3.5 hours at
4°C.
Coronal slices were prepared from embryonic forebrain as previously
described (Noctor et al.,
2001
). Slices were obtained from the anterior half of the cerebral
hemispheres, where medial and lateral ganglionic eminences could be separately
identified, and cultured individually on slice culture inserts (Millicell,
Millipore). Cultured slices were incubated for 48 hours with eGFP-expressing
retrovirus before images were collected on an inverted Zeiss Axiovert 200-LSM
5 Pascal confocal microscope using 488 nm excitation and LP 505-530 nm
emission filters. Images were captured using a 10x objective set at the
sectional plane that contained the majority of migrating cells (optical slice
<10 µm). Time-lapse imaging was performed at 37°C, 100% relative
humidity, 5% CO2 in air on a CO2- and heat-controlled
stage incubator (Zeiss) using minimum laser exposure to prevent photo-damage
and bleaching. Images were taken every 15 minutes for 6 to 12 hours.
Cortical neuroepithelial explant cultures and time-lapse imaging
Telencephalic hemispheres were isolated and cultured on Matrigel or laminin
as described previously (Thomas and
Dziadek, 1993a
). For time-lapse imaging, telencephalic hemisphere
explants on Matrigel were cultured on an inverted imaging microscope (Zeiss)
equipped with a heat-controlled stage incubator at 37°C, 100% relative
humidity and 5% CO2 in air. Images were taken every 5 minutes for
22 hours in phase contrast using a 20x objective. The imaging interval
of 22 hours was taken from day 3 to day 4 after plating.
Statistical data analysis
Data were analysed using StatView 5.0.1 Software (SAS Institute),
performing analyses of variance followed by Fisher's post-hoc tests or
2 test as indicated in the tables. The default alpha value of
the software (5%) was used. Data are presented as mean ± s.e.m.
| RESULTS |
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C3Ggt/gt mutants show morphological defects in the developing cerebral cortex in vivo
Mice homozygous for a C3G-null allele do not survive beyond E5.5
(Ohba et al., 2001
). We
studied the role of C3G later in development, using a hypomorphic mutant
C3G allele (C3Ggt) that expresses less than 1%
normal C3G mRNA and less than 5% normal C3G protein
(Voss et al., 2003
). C3G is
required for blood vessel maturation and, on a 129Sv-enriched background, the
level of C3G protein produced by the C3Ggt mutant allele
is insufficient for the differentiation of blood-vessel-supporting cells,
resulting in haemorrhage in the majority of homozygous mice (80%) by E11.5
(Voss et al., 2003
). However,
we found that crossing the C3Ggt allele onto an outbred
CD1 background or to a CBA inbred background ameliorated the blood vessel
fragility phenotype. On these vigorous genetic backgrounds, all homozygous
embryos live beyond E12.5, the majority are externally indistinguishable from
wild-type littermate controls at E12.5 and are alive at E14.5. This provided
the opportunity to study the requirements for C3G during the early development
of the cerebral cortex.
The C3Ggt/gt mutant cortical neuroepithelium was histologically indistinguishable from wild-type littermate controls at E9.5, E10.5 and E11.5 (not shown). At E12.5, the C3Ggt/gt cortical neuroepithelium lacked a continuous basement membrane, which was visible by differential interference contrast microscopy in wild-type controls (arrows, Fig. 1G, versus arrowheads, Fig. 1H). At E13.5, C3Ggt/gt neuroepithelial cells (arrowheads, Fig. 1J) could be seen in the area of the pericerebral vascular complex, a tissue structure outside of the neuroepithelium, which is demarcated in wild-type controls (stippled line, Fig. 1I). At E14.5, the developing wild-type cortical primordium was clearly organised in a ventricular zone with radially oriented neuroepithelial cells, an intermediate zone and a nascent cortical plate, the primordium of the cerebral cortex (Fig. 1K). The subplate was positioned between the intermediate zone and the cortical plate. The marginal zone overlay the cortical plate on its pial surface (Fig. 1K). By comparison, the C3Ggt/gt cerebral cortex primordium appeared disorganised (Fig. 1L). The subplate was indistinct and, consequently, the boundary between the intermediate zone and the cortical plate was not distinguishable. A cortical plate or a marginal zone could not be discerned (Fig. 1, compare K with L). C3Ggt/gt cortical cells lacked radial orientation and appeared rounded (Fig. 1, compare M with N). The defects in cerebral cortex development were consistently observed in a total of 21 C3Ggt/gt mutant embryos but not in 21 wild-type controls at E12.5 (four pairs), E13.5 (ten pairs) and E14.5 (seven pairs). Our findings suggest that C3G deficiency is incompatible with normal development of the cerebral cortex.
|
We examined the basement membrane integrity by laminin immunofluorescence staining of C3Ggt/gt mutant and wild-type developing cortex (n=3 for each genotype at each developmental stage totaling nine C3Ggt/gt mutant and nine wild-type brains). As expected, laminin immunoreactivity was strongest in the area of the basement membrane and was also seen associated with blood vessels. In the wild type, laminin was continuous, encircling the entire neuroepithelium at its pial surface marking the basement membrane (Fig. 2C). In the C3Ggt/gt mutants, laminin deposition appeared initially irregular (Fig. 2D) and then areas with and without laminin alternated along the pial surface (Fig. 2E). These two stages of disintegration of the basement membrane were seen in C3Ggt/gt mutants at E12.5 and E13.5. At E14.5, the latter, more severe stage of basement membrane disintegration prevailed. Furthermore, cells were found to protrude from the neuroepithelium into the pericerebral space (arrow, Fig. 2G). Map2 staining (arrow, Fig. 2B) and Map2/laminin double staining (arrows, Fig. 2G,I) showed that the cells protruding into the pericerebral space were of neuronal identity. A possible cause of the heterotopic position of neuronal cells in the pericerebral space is the basement membrane disintegration.
C3Ggt/gt mutants exhibit cortical neuron migration defects in vivo resulting in a failure of preplate splitting
At E10.5, the first neurons are born, migrate to the pial surface and form
the cortical preplate, which can be seen between E12.5 and E13.5. These
preplate cells can be observed in their final destination after incorporation
of the thymidine analogue BrdU during the DNA-synthesis phase of their last
cell division at E10.5. The next cohort of neurons leave the cell cycle at
E11.5, migrate from the ventricular zone towards the pial surface and position
themselves in the centre of the preplate, thereby splitting the preplate into
marginal zone and subplate, which can be seen at E14.5. If the preplate cells
have been labelled with BrdU previously, the products of preplate splitting,
the marginal zone and the subplate, are visible as two distinct layers
containing BrdU-labelled cells. Cells that leave the cell cycle after BrdU
label incorporation are strongly BrdU positive. By contrast, cells remaining
in the cell cycle distribute the BrdU to their progeny, thereby diluting it,
resulting in weakly BrdU-positive cells.
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Laminin staining was continuous in the wild-type, but discontinuous in the C3Ggt/gt brains, indicating disruption of the basement membrane (Fig. 2; Fig. 4, compare A,C,E,G with B,D,F,H). The basement membrane defect became successively more severe from E12.5 to E14.5 (Fig. 4, compare B with D and F with H). RC2 immunofluorescence, marking radial glial cell processes, was observed along cell processes with ventricular-to-pial orientation, essentially parallel to each other, in the wild type (Fig. 4A,C, arrowheads in E). By contrast, radial glial fibres in the C3Ggt/gt mutants were disorganised, lacked ventricular-to-pial orientation and were entangled (Fig. 4B,D and long arrows in F). Numerous small areas of overlap between RC2 and laminin staining could be observed in the wild-type tissue by confocal microscopy (arrows, Fig. 4E) and epifluorescence (arrows, Fig. 4G). These areas of laminin and RC2 overlap represent anchoring of radial glial fibres to the basement membrane. Areas of overlap between laminin and RC2 were similar in number in C3Ggt/gt mutants and controls at E12.5, but significantly reduced in the C3Ggt/gt mutants as compared with wild type at E13.5 and E14.5 (Fig. 4E-H, 25.0±4.0 versus 64.3±6.4 per 220 µm of basement membrane length, respectively; P=0.0065). Although normal numbers of RC2 and laminin double-positive areas were observed at E12.5, the basement membrane was already disorganised and tangling of radial glial processes was already manifest (Fig. 4B), suggesting that both disintegration of the basement membrane and lack of cell attachment contribute to the abnormal phenotype of C3Ggt/gt mutants. Lack of cell anchoring to the basement membrane, as well as the disorganisation of the radial glial processes, are possible causes of abnormal neuronal migration.
|
C3Ggt/gt mutant cortical neurons fail to migrate in organotypic brain slice culture
To enable us to observe cortical neuron migration in real time, we
conducted organotypic slice cultures of C3Ggt/gt mutant,
C3Ggt/+ heterozygous and wild-type brains infected with
eGFP-expressing virus to enable visualisation (n=3 each for
C3Ggt/gt mutant, wild-type and C3Ggt/+
heterozygous brains).
The E12.5 wild-type brain slices formed a robust cortical plate within the 48 hours of culture as revealed by FITC-phalloidin staining of filamentous actin (Fig. 6A). By contrast, the C3Ggt/gt mutant slices failed to form a cortical plate (arrows, Fig. 6B), mirroring the defects observed in vivo (Figs 1 and 2). The viral vector infects proliferating cells in the ventricular zone, which during the 48 hours of culture give rise to cells that continue to proliferate as well as to cells that differentiate into neurons. Consequently, both differentiating and proliferating cells are eGFP labelled during the imaging period. Forty-eight hours after viral infection, many eGFP-positive cells had migrated a considerable distance from the ventricular zone towards the pial surface in the wild-type slices (arrows, Fig. 6A,C). By contrast, eGFP-positive C3Ggt/gt mutant cells predominantly remained near the ventricular surface (arrowheads, Fig. 6B,D). Time-lapse movies of wild-type and C3Ggt/gt mutant brain slices (see Movies 1, 2 in the supplementary material) as well as still images (Fig. 6E-K) show a clear ventricular-to-pial orientation of the wild-type, but not of the C3Ggt/gt mutant, cortical neurons. The wild-type neurons were predominantly bipolar and showed cell processes in pial or ventricular direction (arrowheads, Fig. 6E,G), whereas the C3Ggt/gt mutant neurons were mostly multipolar and had three or more short processes in various directions (arrowheads, Fig. 6D,F,H-K). In the time-lapse movies it was apparent that the wild-type neurons moved along their ventricular-to-pial processes (see Movie 1 in the supplementary material), whereas the C3Ggt/gt mutant neurons merely sent out small processes continually, merely to retract them again and to send out another small process in a different direction (see Movie 2 in the supplementary material). Only a very few C3Ggt/gt mutant neurons moved from their position during the timelapse imaging, although some circular movement was observed (compare Movies 1 and 2 in the supplementary material). The speed of movement of C3Ggt/gt mutant cells was significantly slower than that of wild-type cells (Table 2). C3Ggt/+ heterozygous neurons did not exhibit a migration defect and were indistinguishable from wild type (not shown).
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C3Ggt/gt mutant cortical neurons fail to migrate on complex or defined matrix in vitro
Dorsal telencephalic neuroepithelium explant cultures were established to
monitor cortical neuron migration on a complex ECM or recombinant laminin. In
wild-type cultures, cell processes emanated radially and neurons emerged and
migrated away from the explants along the cell processes after 3 days
(arrowheads, Fig. 7A). After 6
days of culture, wild-type explants were surrounded by a corona of radially
migrating neurons (arrowheads, Fig.
7C). In addition to migration along explant-derived cell
processes, wild-type cells also migrated on complex matrix independently of
cell processes. By contrast, C3Ggt/gt telencephalic
explants did not give rise to processes or migrating cells throughout the
culture period (Fig. 7, compare
A with B and C with D) (n=14 each for wild-type,
C3Ggt/+ and C3Ggt/gt brains).
Similarly, on the defined laminin substrate, C3Ggt/gt
explants failed to generate processes or migrating neurons, whereas wild-type
explants exhibited both processes and migrating neurons
(Fig. 7, compare E with F).
C3Ggt/+ heterozygous explants were indistinguishable from
wild-type explants (not shown). As C3Ggt/gt mutant cells
were unable to send out processes, we can only comment on their ability for
cell-process-independent migration in this assay and conclude that, unlike
wild-type cells, C3Ggt/gt mutant cells were incapable of
migration on complex or defined matrix. In time-lapse movies, wild-type
cortical neurons were observed migrating centrifugally away from the explants.
Some wild-type cells first moved away, then towards the explants and finally
reverted to centrifugal migration. A migration velocity of 10 µm/hour was
observed (Fig. 7I-K and see
Movie 3 in the supplementary material). The speed of 10 µm/hour is similar
to that observed previously for cortical neurons
(Noctor et al., 2004
). By
contrast, C3Ggt/gt mutant cortical neuroepithelial
explants showed a complete absence of migration. Note, however, that although
no cells migrated out of the C3Ggt/gt explants, movement
within the C3Ggt/gt explants was apparent and the explants
increased in size during the culture period
(Fig. 7L-N and see Movie 4 in
the supplementary material; n=8 each for wild-type,
C3Ggt/+ and C3Ggt/gt brains).
|
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C3G mediates reelin-induced Rap1 activation
Since the preplate splitting defect in the C3Ggt/gt
mutant embryos resembles the preplate splitting defect in reelin mutant mice,
we postulated that C3G might be an effector of reelin signalling. Indeed, C3G
is phosphorylated (activated) in response to reelin stimulation in E16.5
wild-type, but not in Dab1 mutant, cortical neurons; furthermore, the
downstream target of C3G activation, Rap1 is loaded with GTP upon reelin
stimulation (Ballif et al.,
2004
). As previously shown by others
(Ballif et al., 2004
), we
observed that E16.5 wild-type cortical neurons treated with reelin
(Fig. 8A) exhibited induction
of C3G tyrosine phosphorylation (Fig.
8B) corresponding to C3G activation. As the major effect of C3G
activation is Rap1 GTP loading [activation
(Ohba et al., 2001
)], we
examined Rap1 activation in C3G mutant and wild-type cells. To obtain
sufficient amounts of material for this experiment we used E10.5 neural
precursor cells expanded in vitro as described previously
(Voss et al., 2006
). After 4
hours of mitogen withdrawal, E10.5 neural precursor cells were treated with or
without reelin. GTP loading of Rap1 (activation) was higher in mock-treated
wild-type cells than in mock-treated C3G mutant cells
(Fig. 8C). Moreover,
reelin-treated wild-type cells showed higher levels of Rap1 GTP loading than
C3G mutant cells. Reelin-treated C3G mutant cells had 5-fold
lower levels of GTP-loaded Rap1, even compared with unstimulated wild-type
cells (Fig. 8C). C3G
mutant cells responded to reelin stimulation with modest levels of Rap1 GTP
loading, which may be attributed to the fact that our
C3Ggt allele is not a null allele and produces
approximately 5% normal C3G protein (Voss
et al., 2003
).
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
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Firstly, C3G deficiency causes a fundamental defect in one of the earliest steps of cortical neuron migration, i.e. C3G-deficient cortical neurons fail to split the cortical preplate. The first C3G-deficient post-mitotic neurons are positioned near the pial surface and form an apparently normal preplate. However, prospective layer VI neurons fail to migrate into the preplate and therefore fail to split the preplate into marginal zone and subplate. Instead, the second cohort remains below the preplate. This phenotype has previously been found in four cases only, all mutations of members of the reelin signalling pathway.
Secondly, we found areas of the developing cortex where the basement membrane was disrupted and groups of cortical neurons had invaded the marginal zone. This phenotype is similar to the undulating cortex previously observed in mice with mutations causing a disruption of the basement membrane or disruption of the interactions of cells with the basement membrane.
The cortical preplate splitting defect in C3Ggt/gtmutants
The defect in cortical preplate splitting in C3Ggt/gt
mutant embryos is similar to defects found in mice carrying mutations in the
reelin gene (D'Arcangelo et al.,
1995
; Sheppard and Pearlman,
1997
), ApoER2 (Lrp8 -Mouse Genome Informatics)
and Vldlr (Trommsdorff et al.,
1999
), Src and Fyn
(Kuo et al., 2005
) and
Dab1 (Howell et al.,
1997
; Rice et al.,
1998
; Sheldon et al.,
1997
). Mutations in these genes of the reelin signalling pathway
cause preplate splitting defects and subsequently show defects in cortical
layer formation.
Signalling through the reelin/ApoER2/Vldlr/Src/Fyn/Dab1 signalling pathway
(D'Arcangelo et al., 1995
;
Howell et al., 1997
;
Kuo et al., 2005
;
Sheldon et al., 1997
;
Trommsdorff et al., 1999
) is
required for the development of normal cortical lamination. However, only the
proximal aspects of this signalling pathway and some, but not all, downstream
events are well understood (D'Arcangelo,
2006
; Tissir and Goffinet,
2003
). Reelin binding to ApoER2/Vldlr activates the Src family
kinases Src and Fyn, which leads to Dab1 phosphorylation. How these events are
connected to the downstream effectors, such as actin skeleton reorganisation
and microtubule motor complex function, is unknown
(D'Arcangelo, 2006
;
Tissir and Goffinet, 2003
).
Although additional components of the reelin signalling pathway have been
identified in vitro in recent years, their function in neuronal migration in
vivo has not been elucidated (D'Arcangelo,
2006
). In particular, it was recently reported that C3G
phosphorylation is the first phosphorylation event in reelin-stimulated
neurons, along with Dab1 phosphorylation
(Ballif et al., 2004
). However,
that study did not address whether or not C3G is functionally relevant to
neuronal migration. We provide direct evidence here that lack of C3G causes
similar defects in early corticogenesis to reelin mutation. Furthermore, we
show that in the C3G-deficient state, the effects of reelin mediated by C3G,
namely increased Rap1 GTP loading, are largely abrogated. As C3G is required
for filopodia formation in fibroblasts
(Radha et al., 2007
) and Rap1
for protrusion formation in a number of cell lines
(Arthur et al., 2004
),
reelin-induced C3G-mediated Rap1 activation may be required for cell process
extension.
Recent detailed studies have shown that there are multiple modes of neuron
migration and that migration might involve a number of discrete stages.
Initially, neurons leave the ventricular zone by a process of somal
translocation, in which neurons retain connection to the pial surface but lose
connection to cells lining the ventricle and retract to the pia. Subsequently,
neurons move away from the ventricles by locomotion, a process by which cells
migrate along radial glia, but may also leave glia and reside temporally in
the subventricular zone before resuming migration. While dissociated from the
radial glia, these cells have a characteristic multipolar phenotype
(Noctor et al., 2004
;
Tabata and Nakajima, 2003
).
Interestingly, the majority of C3G-deficient neurons display a multipolar
morphology and are arrested in migration in brain slice cultures. This
phenotype is reminiscent of the dominant-negative and RNAi depletion
phenotypes of filamin A and Lis1 (Pafah1β1 -Mouse Genome Informatics),
which both cause arrest at the multipolar stage of cortical neuron migration
(Nagano et al., 2004
;
Tsai et al., 2005
). Failure to
return to the bipolar morphology may impede further migration. It is therefore
possible that C3G might provide a link between the well-known upstream aspects
of the reelin signalling pathway and effector events involving filamin A and
Lis1 function in the contexts of the actin cytoskeleton and the microtubule
motor complex.
The disorientation of the radial glial processes in the
C3Ggt/gt mutants surpasses that observed in Reeler
mutants. In Reeler mutants, radial glial processes span the
ventricular-to-pial extent of the developing cortex at an oblique angle
(Hartfuss et al., 2003
;
Luque et al., 2003
;
Magdaleno and Curran, 2001
).
In C3Ggt/gt mutants, radial glial processes are completely
disorganised suggesting, in addition to a defect in reelin signalling, the
failure of a second cellular process, as discussed below.
Defective interaction between neuroepithelial cells and the basement membrane in C3Ggt/gt mutants
In addition to the overlap between the C3Ggt/gt and the
reelin mutant phenotypes, the C3Ggt/gt mutant phenotype
shows similarities to the abnormalities caused by disruption of the basement
membrane (Halfter et al.,
2002
) or failure to attach to the basement membrane
(Beggs et al., 2003
;
Graus-Porta et al., 2001
;
Niewmierzycka et al., 2005
).
For example, mouse foetuses with nervous-system-specific deletion of the
β1 integrin gene (Itgb1) show a discontinuous basement membrane
as evidenced by discontinuous laminin staining. Moreover, they exhibit
invasion of the marginal zone by cortical plate neurons
(Graus-Porta et al., 2001
).
Like the β1 integrin-deficient developing cerebral cortex, the
C3Ggt/gt mutant cortex primordium exhibits discontinuity
of laminin deposits in the basement membrane and invasion of the marginal zone
and even of the pericerebral space by cortical neurons, suggesting a total
collapse of basement membrane function. As interactions of laminins with
integrin receptors are required to localise laminin at appropriate sites for
basement membrane assembly (Schwarzbauer,
1999
), and as C3G is required for integrin signalling and function
(Arai et al., 2001
;
Arai et al., 1999
;
Uemura and Griffin, 1999
;
Voss et al., 2003
;
Voss et al., 2006
), the
observed discontinuity of the basement membrane is likely to be the result of
a lack of integrin signalling in the absence of C3G.
Notably, RC2-positive radial glia cell fibres, which are important for
cortical neuron migration, largely fail to connect to the discontinuous
laminin deposits present in the C3Ggt/gt mutants. Perhaps
as a consequence of their failure to connect to the ECM, the
C3Ggt/gt mutant radial glia fibres are disorganised,
entangled and lack ventricular-to-pial orientation. Furthermore, our in vitro
findings show that C3G is required for neuron-ECM interaction for process
extension and migration on ECM. Previous reports have established that C3G is
activated in response to the engagement of number of different substrates and
different integrin heterodimers in a variety of cell types
(Arai et al., 2001
;
Arai et al., 1999
;
Uemura and Griffin, 1999
).
Functionally, C3G is essential for embryonic fibroblast cell adhesion and
regulation of migration (Ohba et al.,
2001
; Voss et al.,
2003
) and for the establishment/maintenance of β1 integrin-
and paxillin-positive focal adhesions in embryonic fibroblasts
(Voss et al., 2003
).
Furthermore, laminin-induced Rap1 activation is C3G dependent in
differentiating neural precursor cells
(Voss et al., 2006
). Our
current data show that, similar to fibroblasts, neurons have an essential
requirement for C3G for interaction with ECM proteins.
In conclusion, we have shown that the Ras signalling molecule C3G is crucial for cortical neuron migration. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that reelin signalling and integrin signalling converge on C3G activity in migrating cortical neurons. The C3G mutant phenotype combines both elements-reelin loss and integrin loss - and therefore exceeds either of these mutants in severity.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material for this article is available at
http://dev.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/135/12/2139/DC1
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