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The evolution of neuronal progenitor cell division in mammals: The role of the abnormal spindle-like microcephaly associated (Aspm) protein and epithelial cell polarityFish, Jennifer 09 July 2007 (has links)
Among mammals, primates are exceptional for their large brain size relative to body size. Relative brain size, or encephalization, is particularly striking among humans and their direct ancestors. Since the human-chimp split 5 to 7 million years ago, brain size has tripled in the human lineage (Wood & Collard 1999). The focus of this doctoral work is to investigate some of the cell biological mechanisms responsible for this increase in relative brain size. In particular, the processes that regulate symmetric cell division (ultimately generating more progenitors), the constraints on progenitor proliferation, and how neural progenitors have overcome these constraints in the process of primate encephalization are the primary questions of interest. Both functionally analyses in the mouse model system and comparative neurobiology of rodents and primates are used here to address these questions. Using the mouse model system, the cell biological role of the Aspm (abnormal spindle-like microcephaly associated) protein in regulating brain size was investigated. Specifically, Aspm function in symmetric, proliferative divisions of neuroepithelial (NE) cells was analyzed. It was found that Aspm expression in the mouse neuroepithelium correlates in time and space with symmetric, proliferating divisions. The Aspm protein localizes to NE cell spindle poles during all phases of mitosis, and is down-regulated in cells that undergo asymmetric (neurogenic) cell divisions. Aspm RNAi alters the division plane in NE cells, increasing the likelihood of premature asymmetric division resulting in an increase in non-NE progeny. At least some of the non-NE progeny generated by Aspm RNAi migrate to the neuronal layer and express neuronal markers. Importantly, whatever the fate of the non-NE progeny, their generation comes at the expense of the expansion of the proliferative pool of NE progenitor cells. These data have contributed to the generation of an hypothesis regarding evolutionary changes in the regulation of spindle orientation in vertebrate and mammalian neural progenitors and their impact on brain size. Specifically, in contrast to invertebrates that regulate the switch from symmetric to asymmetric division through a rotation of the spindle (horizontal versus vertical cleavage), asymmetric NE cell division in vertebrates is accomplished by only a slight deviation in the cleavage plane away from the vertical, apical-basal axis. The requirement for the precise alignment of the spindle along the apical-basal axis in symmetric cell divisions may have contributed to selection on spindle “precision” proteins, thus increasing the number of symmetric NE cell division, and contributing to brain size increases during mammalian evolution. Previous comparative neurobiological analyses have revealed an increase in basally dividing NE cells in the brain regions of highest proliferation and in species with the largest brains (Smart 1972a,b; Martinez-Cerdeno et al. 2006). The cell biological characteristics of these basally dividing cells are still largely unknown. We found that primate basal progenitors, similar to rodent apical progenitors, are Pax6+. This suggests that primate basal progenitors may share other properties with rodent apical progenitors, such as maintenance of apical contact. Our previous finding that artificial alteration of cleavage plane in NE cells affects their ability to continue proliferating supports the hypothesis that the apical membrane and junctional complexes are cell fate determinants (Huttner & Kosodo 2005). As such, the need to maintain apical membrane contact appears to be a constraint on proliferation (Smart 1972a,b; Smart et al. 2002). Together, these data favor the hypothesis that primate basally dividing cells maintain apical contact and are epithelial in nature.
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