Neurogenic role of Gcm transcription factors is conserved in chicken spinal cord.
2006
Although glial cells missing ( gcm ) genes are known as
glial determinants in the fly embryo, the role of vertebrate orthologs in the
central nervous system is still under debate. Here we show for the first time
that the chicken ortholog of fly gcm (herein referred to as
c-Gcm1 ), is expressed in early neuronal lineages of the developing
spinal cord and is required for neural progenitors to differentiate as
neurons. Moreover, c-Gcm1 overexpression is sufficient to trigger
cell cycle exit and neuronal differentiation in neural progenitors. Thus,
c-Gcm1 expression constitutes a crucial step in the developmental
cascade that prompts progenitors to generate neurons: c-Gcm1 acts
downstream of proneural (neurogenin) and progenitor (Sox1-3) factors and
upstream of NeuroM neuronal differentiation factor. Strikingly, this
neurogenic role is not specific to the vertebrate gene, as fly gcm
and gcm2 are also sufficient to induce the expression of neuronal
markers. Interestingly, the neurogenic role is restricted to post-embryonic
stages and we identify two novel brain neuronal lineages expressing and
requiring gcm genes. Finally, we show that fly gcm and the
chick and mouse orthologs induce expression of neural markers in HeLa cells.
These data, which demonstrate a conserved neurogenic role for Gcm
transcription factors, call for a re-evaluation of the mode of action of these
genes during evolution.
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