Motor neurons and oligodendrocytes arise from distinct cell lineages by progenitor recruitment

  1. Bruce Appel
  1. Department of Pediatrics, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado 80045, USA
  1. Corresponding authors: bruce.appel{at}ucdenver.edu, andrew.ravanelli{at}ucdenver.edu

Abstract

During spinal cord development, ventral neural progenitor cells that express the transcription factors Olig1 and Olig2, called pMN progenitors, produce motor neurons and then oligodendrocytes. Whether motor neurons and oligodendrocytes arise from common or distinct progenitors in vivo is not known. Using zebrafish, we found that motor neurons and oligodendrocytes are produced sequentially by distinct progenitors that have distinct origins. When olig2+ cells were tracked during the peak period of motor neuron formation, most differentiated as motor neurons without further cell division. Using time-lapse imaging, we found that, as motor neurons differentiated, more dorsally positioned neuroepithelial progenitors descended to the pMN domain and initiated olig2 expression. Inhibition of Hedgehog signaling during motor neuron differentiation blocked the ventral movement of progenitors, the progressive initiation of olig2 expression, and oligodendrocyte formation. We therefore propose that the motor neuron-to-oligodendrocyte switch results from Hedgehog-mediated recruitment of glial-fated progenitors to the pMN domain subsequent to neurogenesis.

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Footnotes

  • Received September 15, 2015.
  • Accepted October 30, 2015.

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