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Deconstructing Sox2 Function in Brain Development and Disease

Journal

CELLS
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11101604

Keywords

Sox2; neural stem cells; neurons; glia; development; brain; transcription factor

Categories

Funding

  1. ERA-NET NEURON [NEURON8-Full-815-091, NEURON_NDD-255]
  2. Fondo di Ateneo Quota Competitiva, University of Milan-Bicocca
  3. Vinci-Universita' Italo-Francese PhD fellowship
  4. University of Milan-Bicocca

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This article reviews the diverse phenotypes resulting from conditional Sox2 knockout in different regions of the developing and postnatal brain in mice. It is found that despite the widespread expression of Sox2 in neural stem/progenitor cells, some regions (such as the hippocampus and ventral forebrain) are more vulnerable to Sox2 deletion. The stage of Sox2 deletion also plays a critical role in the resulting defects, indicating a stage-specificity of SOX2 function.
SOX2 is a transcription factor conserved throughout vertebrate evolution, whose expression marks the central nervous system from the earliest developmental stages. In humans, SOX2 mutation leads to a spectrum of CNS defects, including vision and hippocampus impairments, intellectual disability, and motor control problems. Here, we review how conditional Sox2 knockout (cKO) in mouse with different Cre recombinases leads to very diverse phenotypes in different regions of the developing and postnatal brain. Surprisingly, despite the widespread expression of Sox2 in neural stem/progenitor cells of the developing neural tube, some regions (hippocampus, ventral forebrain) appear much more vulnerable than others to Sox2 deletion. Furthermore, the stage of Sox2 deletion is also a critical determinant of the resulting defects, pointing to a stage-specificity of SOX2 function. Finally, cKOs illuminate the importance of SOX2 function in different cell types according to the different affected brain regions (neural precursors, GABAergic interneurons, glutamatergic projection neurons, Bergmann glia). We also review human genetics data regarding the brain defects identified in patients carrying mutations within human SOX2 and examine the parallels with mouse mutants. Functional genomics approaches have started to identify SOX2 molecular targets, and their relevance for SOX2 function in brain development and disease will be discussed.

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