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First published online August 25, 2008
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.022616
1 Laboratory for Cell Asymmetry, Center for Developmental Biology, RIKEN Kobe
Institute, 2-2-3 Minatojima-minamimachi, Chuo-ku, Kobe, Hyogo 650-0047,
Japan.
2 Functional Genomics Unit, Center for Developmental Biology, RIKEN Kobe
Institute, 2-2-3 Minatojima-minamimachi, Chuo-ku, Kobe, Hyogo 650-0047,
Japan.
3 Laboratory for Systems Biology, Center for Developmental Biology, RIKEN Kobe
Institute, 2-2-3 Minatojima-minamimachi, Chuo-ku, Kobe, Hyogo 650-0047,
Japan.
4 Laboratory for Mammalian Germ Cell Biology, Center for Developmental Biology,
RIKEN Kobe Institute, 2-2-3 Minatojima-minamimachi, Chuo-ku, Kobe, Hyogo
650-0047, Japan.
5 CREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency.
* Authors for correspondence (e-mails: akawa{at}cdb.riken.jp; fumio{at}cdb.riken.jp)
Accepted 28 July 2008
| SUMMARY |
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Key words: Cortical development, Neurogenesis, Single-cell cDNA, Neural progenitors, Notch signaling
| INTRODUCTION |
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Although the apical and basal progenitors can be distinguished from each
other by several molecular markers and by their mitotic positions
(Englund et al., 2005
), the
mechanism by which apical progenitors differentiate into basal progenitors and
how their populations are controlled during cortical development are unclear.
Furthermore, it is not clear whether the apical progenitor cells are composed
of distinct populations. Some apical progenitors divide symmetrically,
generating two daughters of the same type, but they are also capable of
dividing asymmetrically to generate a single neuron and a progenitor cell, or
two different types of progenitor cells
(Guillemot, 2005
;
Huttner and Kosodo, 2005
).
This heterogeneity in division patterns may depend on differential properties
among the apical progenitor cells. Molecular perspectives on progenitor
heterogeneity (e.g. Gal et al.,
2006
; Hartfuss et al.,
2001
) are, thus, essential for studying these fundamental
questions regarding neocortical development. However, the highly dynamic
migratory behavior of neuronal progenitors during their cell cycle, in
addition to possible temporal changes in their gene expression, have made it
difficult to approach these issues.
The molecular framework behind the differentiation of progenitors into
neurons relies on Notch signaling
(Guillemot, 2005
;
Yoon and Gaiano, 2005
).
Although the neural cells expressing Notch ligands, such as Delta [delta-like
1 (Dll1) in mouse], have not been explicitly identified, they are thought to
be differentiating neurons. In neural stem cells, activation of the Notch
signal induces the bHLH transcription factors, Hes1 and/or Hes5, which in turn
repress the expression of proneural genes such as neurogenin 2
(Neurog2), NeuroD (Neurod1) and Ascl1
(Mash1). Proneural genes are transiently expressed in differentiating
neurons, and induce expression of a wide spectrum of neuron-specific genes to
promote neuronal differentiation. The role of Notch signaling in creating
progenitor diversity, however, remains elusive in mammalian neurogenesis.
Here we analyzed the gene expression profiles
(Tietjen et al., 2003
) of a
large number of single, isolated neocortical progenitor cells at the
mid-embryonic stage to explore the diversity of neural progenitor cells. We
manually picked up single cerebral cells without recourse to a cell sorter. By
doing so, we minimized the time needed for single-cell isolation, and thereby
also minimized the changes that occur in mRNA expression in cells during the
isolation process. Furthermore, an improved single-cell cDNA amplification
method (Kurimoto et al., 2006
;
Kurimoto et al., 2007
) enabled
us to perform quantitative high-density oligonucleotide microarray analyses of
cDNA from individual cells and to investigate the heterogeneity of progenitors
at the single-cell level.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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cDNA synthesis from single cerebral cells
Small VZ/SVZ fragments or cortical plate (CP) fragments of the dorsolateral
portion of a CD1 mouse cerebral wall at E14 were digested in 100 µl PBS
containing 0.25% trypsin and 0.5% glucose for 5 minutes at 37°C and
triturated. After adding Hank's solution (Nacalai, Japan) with trypsin
inhibitor (Ovomucoid, Sigma), single, isolated cells were randomly picked up
manually by glass capillary under an inverted microscope and transferred to
PCR tubes containing 4.5 µl of cell lysis buffer spiked with RNA:
poly(A)-tailed Bacillus subtilis lys, dap, phe and thr RNAs
at 1000, 100, 20 and 5 copies per cell, respectively. cDNA synthesis after
cell lysis was performed as previously described
(Kurimoto et al., 2006
;
Kurimoto et al., 2007
). The
quality of the amplified cDNA samples was screened by the consistent
amplification of the added RNAs and housekeeping genes [Gapdh,
beta-actin (Actb), Aldoa and Pabpn1] by
quantitative real-time PCR (Q-PCR) (the first quality check). cDNAs were
subjected to another amplification step with primers bearing the T7 promoter
sequence. The quality of these second PCR products was again examined by Q-PCR
for housekeeping genes and the added RNA (the second quality check). In the
case of the single-cell cDNAs of the progenitor cells, all samples that passed
the secondary quality check were used for the GeneChip analysis.
Q-PCR analysis
Q-PCR was performed (primers as listed in
Table 1) against the cDNAs
before adding the T7 promoter sequence (the first quality check and
examination of marker gene expression; see
Table 2 and see Fig. S1 in the
supplementary material), and against the second PCR products (the second
quality check), using the 7900 Real-Time PCR system (Applied Biosystems)
according to the manufacturer's instructions.
|
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Data analysis
To identify significantly differentially expressed probe sets across Groups
A, B and C (SigABC genes), the GeneChip data were subjected to analysis of
variance (ANOVA) (Group A, n=7 samples; Group B, n=15; Group
C, n=7) against each probe set on the GeneChip (n=45,037
probe sets). The false discovery rate (FDR) was calculated from the
P-values of the ANOVA, and probe sets showing FDR<0.1 were
selected as significantly different probe sets (n=114 probe sets)
(see Table S1 in the supplementary material). The `Over-20 copies' probe sets
(n=10,493 probe sets) were defined as the probe sets for which at
least 1 of 70 samples expressed >20 copies per cell, which was more than
the signal level of 909.6 (the median expression level of `AFFX-PheX-3_at',
the probe set for the spiked RNA phe, 20 copies per sample). Since
RNAs spiked at 20 copies per cell or more were consistently and proportionally
amplified by our method (see Fig. S2 in the supplementary material), we used
these Over-20 copies probe sets for the unsupervised clustering analysis.
Cluster analysis of the 70 samples was performed using the GeneChip data of
the SigABC genes (Fig. 1A) or
of the Over-20 copies probe sets (Fig.
1B). Hierarchical clustering with approximately unbiased (AU)
P-values, computed by multiscale bootstrap resampling for assessing
the uncertainty in the hierarchical cluster analysis, was performed using the
R software package pvclust (Suzuki and
Shimodaira, 2006
), with nboot=10,000, distance correlation and
complete-linkage cluster analysis.
The probe sets with significantly different expression between Cluster I and II/III (n=1440 probe sets, FDR<0.1) were identified by Welch's t-test, and between Cluster I (n=33 samples) and II/III (n=23) against each Over-20 copies probe set (n=10,493 probe sets) and FDR were calculated from the two-tailed P-values using the R software package Q-value (http://genomics.princeton.edu/storeylab/qvalue). Among these significant probe sets (n=1440 probe sets), the top 175 Cluster I genes (log fold-change cut-off <-2.50) and the top 117 Cluster II/III genes (log fold-change cut-off >2.50) were further used for the hierarchical cluster analysis shown in Figs 2 and 4. The value of the log fold-change was obtained by subtracting the mean of logarithmic signal values in Cluster I cells from the mean of logarithmic signal values in Cluster II and III cells.
The probe sets that were significantly differentially expressed between Cluster I and Cluster II/III (n=1440 probe sets) were further analyzed for their functions using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis [(IPA) Ingenuity Systems, Redwood City, CA]. Among the 1440 probe sets, 1400 genes were mapped and 576 were matched in the pathway of the IPA database. These 576 genes were used to look for significant differences among the canonical signaling pathways by IPA.
RNA in situ hybridization
Non-radioactive in situ hybridization of frozen sections of E14 CD1 mouse
brain or cultured slices was performed using antisense RNA probes (see Table
S2 in the supplementary material) labeled with digoxigenin (DIG) (Roche,
Basel, Switzerland). In some cases, in situ hybridization data were obtained
from a website database (GenePaint;
http://www.genepaint.org),
and in these cases the GenePaint set ID is indicated in the figure
(Fig. 3,
Fig. 4B).
Slice culture with DAPT treatment
Coronal slices of dorsolateral forebrain were prepared from E14 CD1 mice as
previously described (Miyata et al.,
2004
), and cultured in collagen gel in growth medium [DMEM/F12
with B27 (Gibco), N2 (Gibco), 5% FBS, 5% horse serum, 10 ng/ml Fgf2 and 20
ng/ml Egf] with 10 µM DAPT {
-secretase inhibitor
N-[N-(3,5-difluorophenacetyl)-L-alanyl]-S-phenylglycine
t-butyl ester} (Sigma) or an equal volume of DMSO (Nacalai), at 36°C with
5% CO2 and 30% O2. After 7 or 20 hours, the slices were
fixed in 4% PFA in PBS and used for immunohistochemistry or in situ
hybridization as cryosections.
Immunochemistry
Antibodies used for the immunostaining of cryostat sections or fixed cells
were: anti-BrdU (mouse IgG, Roche; rat IgG, Abcam), anti-GFP (chick, Aves
Labs), anti-cyclin A (rabbit, Santa Cruz), anti-Ki67 (mouse IgG, BD
Biosciences; mouse IgG, Novocastra), anti-Tbr2 (rabbit, Abcam), anti-Dll1
(sheep IgG, R&D Systems), anti-PH3 (mouse IgG, Sigma), anti-Vcam1 (rat
IgG, BD Pharmingen) and anti-cleaved caspase 3 (rabbit, Cell Signaling). In
some cases, the primary antibody was labeled with Alexa488 (Zenon Alexa Fluor
Labeling Kit, Molecular Probes) prior to use. Secondary antibodies were
conjugated to Alexa488 or Alexa568 (Molecular Probes), Cy3 or Cy5 (Jackson).
Nuclei were counterstained with DAPI.
Microarray data
Microarray data are available on the GEO database with accession number
GSE10881.
| RESULTS |
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Stem-like cells, i.e. undifferentiated neural progenitor cells in the VZ,
are considered to express Hes1 and not Neurog2
(Yoon and Gaiano, 2005
). Cells
that express high levels of Neurog2 in the VZ are thought to be progenitors
that are biased toward neuronal production
(Britz et al., 2006
), whereas
mature basal progenitors are expected to express SVZ regional markers such as
Svet1 (Tarabykin et al.,
2001
), because they exit the VZ to divide into neurons in the SVZ.
Thus, as the first step in defining the subclasses of progenitor cells, we
examined whether the single-cell cDNAs derived from these `typical' progenitor
cells could be identified in our cDNA samples. We subjected a portion of the
samples to quantitative real-time PCR (Q-PCR), to examine the expression
levels of twenty marker genes representative of the different cell states
(Tables 1,
2; see Fig. S1 in the
supplementary material).
|
We next subjected the same cDNA samples from all the progenitor groups (Groups A, B, C and X) and from the Group D and E cells to a second amplification step, and applied them to DNA microarrays (GeneChip, Affymetrix) to obtain their genome-wide gene expression profiles. After checking the quality of the microarray data, the results from 70 samples (70 microarrays; Table 2) were used for further examination.
Two distinct neural progenitor populations revealed by genome-wide gene expression profiles: Cluster I and Cluster II/III
To examine whether the neural progenitor cells, including the atypical
Group X cells, could be classified according to their gene expression
profiles, we performed hierarchical clustering of the 70 samples based on the
microarray data (Fig.
1A,B).
First, we selected the set of genes that were differently expressed across typical progenitor groups [Groups A, B, C; named SigABC genes, n=114 probe sets, ANOVA, false discovery rate (FDR) <0.1; see Table S1 in the supplementary material], and performed a cluster analysis of the 70 samples using these probe sets (supervised clustering) (Fig. 1A). The four `clusters', Clusters I to IV, were defined essentially based on this dendrogram. Cluster I included all Group A cells (putative undifferentiated progenitor cells) and most of the atypical Group X cells, many of which were Hes1+ Neurog2+ VZ progenitor cells (Table 2). Cluster II cells were mostly Group B cells, which were Hes1- Neurog2+ VZ progenitor cells, whereas Cluster III comprised Group C cells (Svet1+ basal progenitors). Cluster IV cells were neurons.
In the hierarchical clustering diagram (Fig. 1A), the neural progenitor cells are roughly separated into two distinct populations comprising Cluster I and Cluster II plus III (Cluster II/III). Cluster II/III cells were closest to the Cluster IV neurons, occupying the same large branch, indicating that among the progenitor cells, the Cluster III cells were most closely related to neurons. Cluster I cells, including all the Group A cells, were more distant from neurons than were Cluster II cells, reinforcing our assumption that the VZ progenitor cells in Group A were more undifferentiated than those in Group B.
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Genes representing each cluster show characteristic spatial expression patterns in vivo
To verify the cell-clustering results, we assessed whether the gene
expression profiles that represented each cluster reflected the situation in
vivo. For this purpose, we selected a set of genes that represented each
cluster. When we compared Clusters I and II/III, 1440 among the Over-20 copies
probe sets (n=10493) showed a significant difference in expression
level (Welch's t-test, FDR<0.1). Of these, 175 were selected as
Cluster I genes (log fold-change cut-off <-2.50), and 117 as Cluster II/III
genes (log fold-change cut-off >2.50). The microarray data for these gene
sets were used for cluster analysis to see whether these genes are further
characterized by a dependency of their expression profiles on the four
clusters of cells.
|
We next examined the mRNA expression of these genes in E14 mouse brain and
compared it with the gene profiling patterns. In situ hybridization revealed
their expression in characteristic spatial patterns along the radial axis,
which correlated with their expression in the clusters
(Fig. 3A-C). The in situ
hybridization signals for the I- II+ III+
IV- genes was typically split into two separate bands, an upper one
in the SVZ and a lower one in a subdomain of the VZ,
20-40 µm away
from the apical surface (Fig.
3Ac,d,h-k,m). For some genes that showed a stronger signal in
Cluster II than Cluster III, the lower band was dominant and the upper one was
weak or undetectable (Fig.
3Aa,b,f,g,n,o). By contrast, the in situ hybridization signals for
the I- II- III+ IV- genes were
usually confined to the SVZ (Fig.
3B), consistent with the Cluster III cells being SVZ basal
progenitor cells (Table 2 and
Fig. 1). The genes categorized
as I- II+/- III+ IV+ showed
signals in the SVZ and the intermediate zone (IMZ) or CP, where neurons exist
(Fig. 3C). This was consistent
with the Cluster IV cells being neurons.
These results demonstrated that the cell-clustering results based on gene profiling correlated well with the in situ hybridization patterns of the Cluster II/III genes, leading us to conclude that the signals in the lower band in the VZ originated from Cluster II cells, whereas the SVZ signals corresponded to Cluster III cells (the SVZ basal progenitor cells). The Cluster II and Cluster III cells thus share common features in both global gene expression and the in vivo expression of particular genes, although they are assigned to different regions along the radial axis of the brain. The basal progenitor (Cluster III) cells are born at the ventricular surface and migrate through the VZ into the SVZ. Thus, our results raise the possibility that the Cluster II cells are the young basal progenitor cells that are migrating through the VZ on their way to the SVZ (see below).
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Variable expression of cell-fate determinants in Cluster I cells
In an attempt to find subpopulations of Cluster I cells by different
criteria, we tested whether they could be subdivided according to cell-cycle
phases. The expression levels of cell-cycle-related genes could coarsely
discriminate the cell-cycle stage of some Cluster I cells (see Fig. S3 in the
supplementary material), but no correlation was seen with the expression
levels of other genes. As an alternative approach, we examined the expression
levels of genes that had documented associations with neural progenitor cells
(Fig. 5). One remarkable
finding was that Cluster I cells showed highly variable expression of some key
molecules that affect progeny fates, including Hes1, Hes5, Neurog2,
Ascl1 and Dll1 (Fig.
5C-E and see Figs S4-S6 in the supplementary material), whereas
the levels of the other genes tested were relatively homogeneous among the
Cluster I cells irrespective of expression levels (see Figs S4, S5 in the
supplementary material). It is unlikely that these cell-to-cell variations
simply reflect differences in the cell-cycle phase because such variations in
gene expression were observed among samples at similar cell-cycle phases (see
Fig. S3 in the supplementary material). In addition, the variations in the
expression levels of these genes were not coincident with the global gene
expression patterns (Fig. 1).
We noted several characteristic relationships among these determinants. First,
there was no correlation in the expression levels of Hes1 and
Hes5, which are both thought to be downstream of Notch, within the
Cluster I cells (see Figs S4-S6 in the supplementary material), whereas their
expression levels did correlate when all the cells from Clusters I to VI were
compared. Second, Hes5, Neurog2, Ascl1 and Dll1 were
expressed at either a high or a low level in individual Cluster I cells (see
Figs S4-S6 in the supplementary material). Although this characteristic
pattern of gene expression might partly be explained as an artifact of the
amplification procedure, the Cluster I cells could nonetheless be separated
into four groups according to the combinations of high or low Hes5,
Ascl1 and Dll1 expression (see Fig. S6 in the supplementary
material), raising the possibility that the apical progenitors are divided
into subgroups by the expression of this subset of genes (see Discussion).
|
Recent studies have shown that Tbr2 (also known as Eomes) is expressed in
the basal progenitors as well as in SVZ neurons
(Englund et al., 2005
). Since
this gene is one of the markers that reliably distinguishes Clusters I and II
among the VZ progenitor cells, we used Tbr2 to follow the lineage of the
Cluster II cells in the VZ. By BrdU-labeling experiments, we found that Tbr2
expression is specific to the G1 phase in VZ progenitor cells, and that at
least some of them start to express Tbr2 in early G1 phase (see Fig. S7 in the
supplementary material). Furthermore, the expression pattern of a stable EGFP
marker driven by the Tbr2 promoter
(Kwon and Hadjantonakis, 2007
)
strongly suggested that once the cells express EGFP, they never return to the
apical surface (see Fig. S7 in the supplementary material). This implies that
the Cluster II cells in the VZ do not revert to Cluster I (apical progenitor)
cells. We therefore infer that the Cluster II cells are young basal progenitor
cells that have `been committed'. This commitment and the concurrent global
change in gene expression from Cluster I to Cluster II occur during or before
the early G1 phase.
Nascent basal progenitor cells are a major source of Delta signals
To investigate the mechanisms by which basal (including young basal)
progenitor cells are generated from the apical progenitor cells, we analyzed
components of canonical signaling pathways that were differentially expressed
between Cluster I and Cluster II/III cells, using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis
(IPA). The Notch signaling pathway was the most significantly different
(P=0.0002 by IPA); among 37 Notch signaling genes in this database,
nine (Dll1, Dll3, Dtx3, Hes5, Hey1, Mfng, Notch1, Notch2 and
Notch3) were included among the 1440 significantly different genes.
Although Notch signaling is known to be essential for the maintenance of
apical progenitor cells, there has been no detailed analysis at the
single-cell level. In Fig. 5A,
we summarize the expression of genes of several signaling pathways, including
Notch signaling, in single-cell cDNAs. Our gene profiles indicated that the
cells strongly expressing Dll1 were mostly Cluster II cells
(Fig. 5A,D). In situ
hybridization of Dll1 indicated a zonal expression pattern, which was
strongest in the region 20-40 µm away from the apical surface
(Fig. 6A,A'),
corresponding to that of some Cluster II/III genes
(Fig. 3Aa,b,f,g,n,o). This in
situ pattern was consistent with the gene profiles
(Fig. 5A) and the anti-Dll1
immunoreactivity seen in the apical half of the VZ
(Fig. 6C).
Our findings suggested that young basal progenitor cells are a major source
of the Delta signal in vivo, in addition to newborn neurons as previously
suggested (Campos et al.,
2001
). It has been reported that cells in the E14 cerebral wall
that are positive for Dll1 mRNA do not incorporate BrdU and are
negative for anti-phospho-histone H3 (PH3), a marker for M-phase cells
(Campos et al., 2001
). This is
consistent with our observation suggesting that the Dll1-expressing
Cluster II cells were in G1 phase. By contrast, Dll3 was expressed
mainly in the ventral forebrain and weakly in the SVZ of the dorsomedial
forebrain (Fig. 6B).
Loss of Notch signaling converts apical progenitor cells to basal progenitor cells via the transient Cluster II state
We next examined the role of Notch signaling in the Cluster I cells
directly, by reducing Notch activity with DAPT, a pharmacological inhibitor of
-secretase (Breunig et al.,
2007
; Dovey et al.,
2001
; Nelson et al.,
2007
). First, we examined the effect of DAPT on E14 cerebral slice
cultures. A 20-hour DAPT treatment did not significantly alter the position or
number of Ki67+ (a marker for proliferative cells) cells, but
dramatically increased both the ratio of Tbr2+ cells in the
Ki67+ progenitor cells (Fig.
6D,E,J) and the frequency of non-surface PH3+ dividing
cells (Fig. 6F,G,K). Vcam1 was
specific for the Cluster I cells in the gene profiles
(Fig. 4) and was restricted to
the VZ. Vcam1 immunoreactivity was diminished by DAPT treatment
(Fig. 6H,I). Very similar
observations were made in cells in monolayer-culture, in which most of the
DAPT-treated progenitor cells underwent terminal mitosis (see Fig. S8 in the
supplementary material).
We next examined the temporal changes in gene expression that distinguished Clusters II and III: Dll1 was most strongly expressed in Cluster II; Gadd45g showed stronger expression in Cluster II than III; and Svet1 and Sstr2 were expressed in Cluster III (Figs 2, 3). Treating the slices with DAPT for 7 hours dramatically increased Dll1 and Gadd45g mRNA expression, as compared with the DMSO control (n=7 slices for each) (Fig. 6L,M). In the 20-hour DAPT-treated slices, this increase in Dll1 expression was not observed, and the Gadd45g expression was weakened (n=6 for DMSO, n=5 for DAPT) (Fig. 6N,O). By contrast, no alteration in the Svet1 or Sstr2 expression domain was observed in the 7-hour DAPT-treated slices, but their expression did expand in the 20-hour DAPT-treated slices as compared with the control (Fig. 6L-O). These temporal changes in gene expression are very similar to those we observed in progenitor cells in vivo.
Collectively, these results suggest that the elimination of Notch activity converted the apical progenitor cells to basal progenitor cells via the transient Cluster II state.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
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In the single-cell cDNA samples, we failed to identify very young neurons in the VZ. mRNA expression alone might be insufficient to distinguish the very early young neurons (in the G0 state) from the young basal progenitor cells (in early G1 phase). If this is the case, some Cluster II cells might differentiate directly into neurons without division.
|
We identified many genes that were differentially expressed between the
apical progenitor (Cluster I) cells and the basal progenitor (Cluster II/III)
cells. Some of these are involved in canonical signaling pathways other than
Notch, such as the FGF and Hedgehog pathways, consistent with the findings of
previous studies (de la Pompa et al.,
1997
; Guillemot,
2005
; Lien et al.,
2006
; Vaccarino et al.,
1999
). Fig. 5A
shows the expression levels of all the FGF genes and FGF receptors included in
the Over-20 copies probe sets. Fgfr2 and Fgfr3 were strongly
expressed in the apical progenitor cells (see also
Fig. 4Bg,r and
Fig. 5B). It is known that
JAK-Stat3 signaling acts downstream of Fgf2 to maintain neural progenitor
cells, and that Stat3 directly regulates the expression of Dll1
(Yoshimatsu et al., 2006
). Our
gene profiles further support the notion that cross-talk among these signaling
pathways and Notch signaling plays a role in the diversification of progenitor
cells.
Delta-Notch signaling: place and timing
Taking into account anti-Dll1 immunoreactivity
(Fig. 6C), in situ
hybridization signal for Dll1
(Fig. 6A,A') and gene
profiling data (Fig. 5A), we
conclude that the nascent basal progenitor cells [probably in addition to the
young neurons in the VZ, which form directly from the apical progenitor cells
(Campos et al., 2001
)] only
transiently activate the Notch pathway in neighboring cells through Dll1
expressed on their surface, on the apical side of the VZ in the cerebral
cortex (Fig. 6P). Previous
studies have not detected such Dll1 expression in progenitor subpopulations
(Mizutani et al., 2007
),
probably because this Dll1 activity is highly transient. As previously
revealed in slice culture (Konno et al.,
2008
; Miyata et al.,
2004
), the basal progenitors (and young neurons) retain their
apical process for a short period just after birth at the apical surface, and
then lose it to exit the VZ. This observation, and the presence of high levels
of Dll1 signal in the apical half of the VZ, led us to reasonably assert that
the apical process is a major subcellular structure that receives the Dll1
signal. If this is the case, a subsequent retraction of the apical process by
basal progenitors will result in the exclusion of these cells from receiving
Delta signaling, and force them into an irreversible state of differentiation
in vivo.
Fate choice of the daughters of apical progenitors
The apical progenitor cells undergo heterogeneous division
(Guillemot, 2005
;
Huttner and Kosodo, 2005
)
although they are homogeneous regarding global gene expression. It is,
therefore, unlikely that the apical progenitors with a distinct pattern of
global gene expression generate a particular combination of daughter cells.
Because the nascent basal progenitor cells that express Cluster II genes, such
as Dll1, Gadd45g and Hes6, were observed near the apical
surface, we infer that selection of the basal progenitor cell fate by daughter
cells occurs within a narrow time window (of several hours) during or after
the apical division.
Our DAPT experiments suggest that the attenuation of Notch signaling
triggers the differentiation of the apical progenitor cells into basal
progenitor cells. There are several factors that might affect the Notch
signaling level in the daughter cells within such a narrow time window. One is
the environment surrounding the cells (including the existence of
Dll1-expressing cells) and another is molecular and/or structural differences
between the pair of daughter cells, which are intrinsically created by
division; this includes the asymmetric segregation of Notch-related molecules,
such as Numb (Shen et al.,
2002
; Zhong et al.,
1996
), and/or morphological asymmetry of the daughter cell pair
depending on the inheritance of the basal radial process
(Buchman and Tsai, 2007
;
Fishell and Kriegstein, 2003
;
Miyata et al., 2004
).
Intercellular variations in the expression level of determinants might be an
additional factor. As we observed, the apical progenitor cells have
intercellular variations in the level of downstream determinants of Notch. If
such variations exist in the dividing apical progenitor cells, they will be
inherited by the daughter cells and are likely to bias their fate choice.
Variations in Notch signaling components among the Cluster I population
Fluctuation in the expression levels of cell-fate determinants downstream
of Notch (e.g. Hes1, Hes5 and Neurog2) appeared specific to
Cluster I cells (Fig. 5C and
see Figs S4, S5 in the supplementary material). Although this finding might
partly result from measurement errors owing to low levels of mRNAs, it is more
likely that the observed variations reflect real fluctuations in the
expression levels of these genes, as our amplification for mRNAs is reliable
(see Fig. S2 in the supplementary material)
(Kurimoto et al., 2006
;
Kurimoto et al., 2007
) and the
probe sets for Neurog2, Hes1 and Hes5 function well enough
to detect differences among the clusters
(Fig. 5C and see Figs S4, S5 in
the supplementary material). This variation does not correlate with global
gene expression patterns that reflect the differentiation versus
non-differentiation tendency, implying that the variations among these Cluster
I cells are not equivalent to the differences between the Cluster I and
Cluster II cells. This fluctuation in gene expression might occur within a
single cell over time in vivo, due to transient contacts with surrounding Dll1
sources and/or oscillatory gene expression. Indeed, a recent real-time imaging
study revealed that the expression levels of Hes1 and
Neurog2 (and Dll1) oscillate in complementary phases in
neural progenitor cells (Shimojo et al.,
2008
). One inconsistency is that our analysis of the Cluster I
cells did not show a clear negative correlation between Hes1 and
Neurog2 (Fig. 5C)
unless the Cluster II/III cells were included. This discrepancy might arise
from a difference or delay in phase between transcription and translation.
Alternatively, this variation might reflect an actual diversity among the Cluster I cells. We found that the Cluster I cells could be segregated into four discrete groups according to the expression levels of Hes5, Ascl1 and Dll1 (see Fig. S6 in the supplementary material). Because of the low-to-intermediate expression levels of these genes and owing to the limited number of individual Cluster I cells, we cannot accurately assess the contribution of measurement errors. Nonetheless, the overall expression levels of these three genes in Cluster I cells appeared to be virtually independent of the Hes1 and Neurog2 expression levels, prompting us to speculate that there are subgroups among the apical progenitors that are defined by the differential expression of a limited number of genes. To fully understand the significance of this diversity, it will be important to establish whether the differential expression of these genes in Cluster I cells is inherited by the daughter cells or is merely transient. Time-lapse analyses of GFP-reporter constructs will be useful in addressing this issue. Investigation of these mechanisms will help to elucidate how progenitor divisions are controlled to generate the appropriate numbers and types of daughter cells at the correct time.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material for this article is available at
http://dev.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/135/18/3113/DC1
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