4.5 Article

Regulatory roles of mitochondria and metabolism in neurogenesis

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 69, Issue -, Pages 231-240

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.conb.2021.05.003

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC Adv Grant)
  2. Fondation Roger de Spoelberch
  3. Belgian FWO
  4. FRS/FNRS
  5. AXA Research Fund
  6. Belgian Queen Elizabeth Foundation
  7. Fondation ULB

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Neural stem cells undergo massive changes in mitochondria and metabolism during neuronal differentiation, influencing cell fate through metabolic rewiring and gene expression changes. The impact of mitochondria and metabolism on neurogenesis is essential and conserved across species, with notable differences based on cell context.
Neural stem cells (NSCs) undergo massive molecular and cellular changes during neuronal differentiation. These include mitochondria and metabolism remodelling, which were thought to be mostly permissive cues, but recent work indicates that they are causally linked to neurogenesis. Striking remodelling of mitochondria occurs right after mitosis of NSCs, which influences the postmitotic daughter cells towards self-renewal or differentiation. The transitioning to neuronal fate requires metabolic rewiring including increased oxidative phosphorylation activity, which drives transcriptional and epigenetic effects to influence cell fate. Mitochondria metabolic pathways also contribute in an essential way to the regulation of NSC proliferation and self-renewal. The influence of mitochondria and metabolism on neurogenesis is conserved from fly to human systems, but also displays striking differences linked to cell context or species. These new findings have important implications for our understanding of neurodevelopmental diseases and possibly human brain evolution.

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