4.7 Article

Suppressor of fused controls cerebellum granule cell proliferation by suppressing Fgf8 and spatially regulating Gli proteins

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 147, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.170274

Keywords

Sonic hedgehog signalling; Sufu-Gli regulation; Cerebellum development; Spatial patterning; Granule neurons

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [201303MOP-298636-HDK-CEAB-28738]
  2. Tier I Canada Research Chair
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  4. Hospital for Sick Children
  5. Ontario Graduate Scholarship

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Cerebellar granule cell (GC) development relies on precise regulation of sonic hedgehog (Shh) Gli signalling activity, failure of which is associated with motor disorders and medulloblastoma. Mutations in the pathway regulator suppressor of fused (Sufu), which modulates Gli activators and repressors, are linked to cerebellar dysfunction and tumourigenesis. The mechanism by which Sufu calibrates Shh signalling in GCs is unknown. Math1-Cre-mediated deletion of Sufu in mouse GC progenitors (GCPs) demonstrated that Sufu restricts GCP proliferation and promotes cell cycle exit, by promoting expression of Gli3R and suppressing Gli2 levels. Sufu is also required to promote a high threshold of pathway activity in GCPs. Remarkably, central cerebellar lobules are more deleteriously impacted by Sufu deletion, but are less sensitive to downstream genetic manipulations to reduce Gli2 expression or overexpress a GIi3R mimic, compared with anterior lobules. Transcriptome sequencing uncovered new Sufu targets, especially Fgf8, which is upregulated in Sufu-mutant GCPs. We demonstrate that Fgf8 is necessary and sufficient to drive Sufu-mutant GCP proliferation. This study reveals new insights into the spatial and temporal regulation of cerebellar Shh-Gli signalling, while uncovering new targets, such as Fgf8.

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