4.8 Article

Dystroglycan Organizes Axon Guidance Cue Localization and Axonal Pathfinding

Journal

NEURON
Volume 76, Issue 5, Pages 931-944

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2012.10.009

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Funding

  1. NICHD
  2. NIH [NS34814, NS062047, R01HD055545]
  3. Johns Hopkins Brain Sciences Institute

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Precise patterning of axon guidance cue distribution is critical for nervous system development. Using a murine forward genetic screen for novel determinants of axon guidance, we identified B3gntl and ISPD as required for the glycosylation of dystroglycan in vivo. Analysis of B3gntl, ISPD, and dystroglycan mutant mice revealed a critical role for glycosylated dystroglycan in the development of several longitudinal axon tracts. Remarkably, the axonal guidance defects observed in B3gntl, ISPD, and dystroglycan mutants resemble several of the axon guidance defects found in mice lacking the axon guidance cue Slit and its receptor Robo. This similarity is explained by our observations that dystroglycan binds directly to Slit and is required for proper Slit localization within the basement membrane and floor plate in vivo. These findings establish a novel role for glycosylated dystroglycan as a key determinant of axon guidance cue distribution and function in the mammalian nervous system.

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