4.7 Article

Gli1 Regulates the Postnatal Acquisition of Peripheral Nerve Architecture

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 183-201

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3096-20.2021

Keywords

endoneurium; Gli1; myelination; perineurium; peripheral nerve; Schwann cell

Categories

Funding

  1. NINDS [NS103353, NS100867]
  2. NYU Cancer Center Support Grant [NIH/NCI P30CA016087]
  3. NIH [S10OD019974]

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Peripheral nerves are organized into compartments and Gli1 is a crucial transcriptional effector involved in nerve development, regulation of extracellular matrix production, and nerve vascular organization. Gli1 and Dhh have nonredundant roles in peripheral nerve development.
Peripheral nerves are organized into discrete compartments. Axons, Schwann cells (SCs), and endoneurial fibroblasts (EFs) reside within the endoneurium and are surrounded by the perineurium, a cellular sheath comprised of layers of perineurial glia (PNG). SC secretion of Desert Hedgehog (Dhh) regulates this organization. In Dhh nulls, the perineurium is deficient and the endoneurium is subdivided into small compartments termed minifascicles. Human Dhh mutations cause a neuropathy with similar defects. Here we examine the role of Gli1, a canonical transcriptional effector of hedgehog signaling, in regulating peripheral nerve organization in mice of both genders. We identify PNG, EFs, and pericytes as Gli1-expressing cells by genetic fate mapping. Although expression of Dhh by SCs and Gli1 in target cells is coordinately regulated with myelination, Gli1 expression unexpectedly persists in Dhh null EFs. Thus, Gli1 is expressed in EFs noncanonically (i.e., independent of hedgehog signaling). Gli1 and Dhh also have nonredundant activities. Unlike Dhh nulls, Gli1 nulls have a normal perineurium. Like Dhh nulls, Gli1 nulls form minifascicles, which we show likely arise from EFs. Thus, Dhh and Gli1 are independent signals: Gli1 is dispensable for perineurial development but functions cooperatively with Dhh to drive normal endoneurial development. During development, Gli1 also regulates endoneurial extracellular matrix production, nerve vascular organization, and has modest, nonautonomous effects on SC sorting and myelination of axons. Finally, in adult nerves, induced deletion of Gli1 is sufficient to drive minifascicle formation. Thus, Gli1 regulates the development and is required to maintain the endoneurial architecture of peripheral nerves.

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