4.7 Article

The repulsive guidance molecule RGMa is involved in the formation of afferent connections in the dentate gyrus

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 15, Pages 3862-3869

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5296-03.2004

Keywords

axon; dentate; development; guidance; hippocampus; neuron

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In the developing dentate gyrus, afferent fiber projections terminate in distinct laminas. This relies on an accurately regulated spatio-temporal network of guidance molecules. Here, we have analyzed the functional role of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored repulsive guidance molecule RGMa. In situ hybridization in embryonic and postnatal brain showed expression of RGMa in the cornu ammonis and hilus of the hippocampus. In the dentate gyrus, RGM immunostaining was confined to the inner molecular layer, whereas the outer molecular layers targeted by entorhinal fibers remained free. To test the repulsive capacity of RGMa, different setups were used: the stripe and explant outgrowth assays with recombinant RGMa, and entorhino-hippocampal cocultures incubated either with a neutralizing RGMa antibody (Ab) or with the GPI anchor-digesting drug phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. Entorhinal axons were clearly repelled by RGMa in the stripe and outgrowth assays. After disrupting the RGMa function, the specific laminar termination pattern in entorhino-hippocampal cocultures was lost, and entorhinal axons entered inappropriate hippocampal areas. Our data indicate an important role of RGMa for the layer-specific termination of the perforant pathway as a repulsive signal that compels entorhinal fibers to stay in their correct target zone.

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