4.8 Article

Area-specific temporal control of corticospinal motor neuron differentiation by COUP-TFI

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0911792107

Keywords

arealization; subcerebral projection neurons; neocortex development; corticofugal neurons; nuclear receptor; behavior

Funding

  1. Italian Telethon Foundation
  2. European Community [LSHM-CT-2004-005139]
  3. U. S. National Institutes of Health [NS45523, NS49553]
  4. Harvard Stem Cell Institute
  5. Spastic Paraplegia Foundation
  6. Massachusetts Spinal Cord Injury research program
  7. Travis Roy Foundation
  8. Central Nervous System Research
  9. Emily and Robert Pearlstein Fund for Nervous System Repair
  10. Swiss National Science Foundation
  11. Novartis Foundation

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Transcription factors with gradients of expression in neocortical progenitors give rise to distinct motor and sensory cortical areas by controlling the area-specific differentiation of distinct neuronal subtypes. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying this area-restricted control are still unclear. Here, we show that COUPTFI controls the timing of birth and specification of corticospinal motor neurons (CSMN) in somatosensory cortex via repression of a CSMN differentiation program. Loss of COUP-TFI function causes an area-specific premature generation of neurons with cardinal features of CSMN, which project to subcerebral structures, including the spinal cord. Concurrently, genuine CSMN differentiate imprecisely and do not project beyond the pons, together resulting in impaired skilled motor function in adult mice with cortical COUP-TFI loss-of-function. Our findings indicate that COUP-TFI exerts critical areal and temporal control over the precise differentiation of CSMN during corticogenesis, thereby enabling the area-specific functional features of motor and sensory areas to arise.

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