First published online April 24, 2009
Development 136, 1003e (2009)
© The Company of Biologists Limited
Sugar-coated stop signs for neurons
Proper neuronal migration is crucial for vertebrate nervous system
development, but how do neurons know when to stop migrating? Hitoshi Okamoto
and colleagues now shed light on this question and report that some neuronal
progenitors in zebrafish fail to stop migrating at their normal position when
a sugar called fucose is not synthesized correctly (see
p. 1653). By
screening for mutants in which vagus motor nuclei do not form properly, the
authors isolated the towhead mutant and found that towhead
encodes GDP-mannose 4,6, dehydratase (GMDS), a key enzyme in the fucosylation
pathway. Accordingly, the authors detected fewer fucosylated glycans than
normal in towhead mutant embryos, but although fucosylation has been
reported to regulate Notch signalling, this signalling pathway is not altered
in towhead mutants. The authors also demonstrate that, for correct
migration, GMDS is not required in vagus motor neuron progenitors, but instead
in the surrounding epithelial cells. They propose, therefore, that fucosylated
glycans on epithelial cells prevent migrating vagus motor neuron progenitors
from overshooting their target.

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Related articles in Development:
- Neuroepithelial cells require fucosylated glycans to guide the migration of vagus motor neuron progenitors in the developing zebrafish hindbrain
- Shinya Ohata, Shigeharu Kinoshita, Ryo Aoki, Hideomi Tanaka, Hironori Wada, Sachiko Tsuruoka-Kinoshita, Takashi Tsuboi, Shugo Watabe, and Hitoshi Okamoto
Development 2009 136: 1653-1663.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]