Trio Is a Key Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor Coordinating Regulation of the Migration and Morphogenesis of Granule Cells in the Developing Cerebellum |
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Authors: | Ya-Jing Peng Wei-Qi He Jing Tang Tao Tao Chen Chen Yun-Qian Gao Wen-Cheng Zhang Xue-Yan He Yu-Yuan Dai Nian-Chun Zhu Ning Lv Cheng-Hai Zhang Yan-Ning Qiao Li-Ping Zhao Xiang Gao Min-Sheng Zhu |
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Affiliation: | From the ‡Model Animal Research Center and Moe Key Laboratory of Model Animal for Disease Study, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210061 and ;the §National Institute of Biological Science, Beijing 102206, China |
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Abstract: | Orchestrated regulation of neuronal migration and morphogenesis is critical for neuronal development and establishment of functional circuits, but its regulatory mechanism is incompletely defined. We established and analyzed mice with neural-specific knock-out of Trio, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor with multiple guanine nucleotide exchange factor domains. Knock-out mice showed defective cerebella and severe signs of ataxia. Mutant cerebella had no granule cells in the internal granule cell layer due to aberrant granule cell migration as well as abnormal neurite growth. Trio-deficient granule cells showed reduced extension of neurites and highly branched and misguided processes with perturbed stabilization of actin and microtubules. Trio deletion caused down-regulation of the activation of Rac1, RhoA, and Cdc42, and mutant granule cells appeared to be unresponsive to neurite growth-promoting molecules such as Netrin-1 and Semaphorin 6A. These results suggest that Trio may be a key signal module for the orchestrated regulation of neuronal migration and morphogenesis during cerebellar development. Trio may serve as a signal integrator decoding extrinsic signals to Rho GTPases for cytoskeleton organization. |
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Keywords: | Cell Migration Cytoskeleton Gene Knockout Neurodevelopment Signal Transduction Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor Parallel Fiber Small GTPase |
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