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  4. Neural stem cells are increased after loss of β-catenin, but neural progenitors undergo cell death
 
research article

Neural stem cells are increased after loss of β-catenin, but neural progenitors undergo cell death

Holowacz, Tamara
•
Huelsken, Joerg  orcid-logo
•
Dufort, Daniel
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2011
European Journal of Neuroscience

Neurons and glia in the central nervous system originate from neural stem and progenitor cells that reside in the ventricular zones. Here we examine the role of beta-catenin in neural stem cell (NSC) regulation in mouse embryos lacking beta-catenin specifically in the brain germinal zone. An in vitro clonal neurosphere assay was performed in order to ascertain the status of the NSC population. Intact neurospheres did not form from beta-catenin-null cells due to a loss of cell adhesion and the number of expanded cells was reduced. Rescue of beta-catenin expression restored adhesion and revealed that the number of NSCs increased in the knockout population. Using a clonal colony-forming assay, which confines precursor cells within a solid collagen matrix, we show that the number of NSCs in the hippocampus is unchanged although the beta-catenin knockout striatum actually contains a larger proportion of NSCs. However, these colonies were smaller than those of control cells, due to increased apoptosis in the progenitor population. Furthermore, beta-catenin knockout NSCs also retained multipotentiality as shown by their ability to clonally differentiate into neurons and glia. The effects on neural precursor cells were not due to loss of downstream T-cell factor signaling, as this pathway is not active in vivo in regions of the embryonic brain where NSCs and progenitor cells reside, nor is it active in vitro in NSC colonies. These data reveal that beta-catenin is not required for the maintenance or differentiation of NSCs, but is required for the adhesion and survival of neural progenitor cells.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/j.1460-9568.2011.07632.x
Web of Science ID

WOS:000289641700002

Author(s)
Holowacz, Tamara
Huelsken, Joerg  orcid-logo
Dufort, Daniel
Van Der Kooy, Derek
Date Issued

2011

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Published in
European Journal of Neuroscience
Volume

33

Start page

1366

End page

75

Subjects

cell adhesion

•

cell survival

•

mouse embryos

•

neurosphere assay

•

T-cell factor

•

Wnt

•

Wnt/Beta-Catenin

•

Neuronal Differentiation

•

Nervous-System

•

Mouse Telencephalon

•

Precursor Cells

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Gamma-Catenin

•

Neurogenesis

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Hippocampus

•

Proliferation

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Hematopoiesis

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPHUELSKEN  
Available on Infoscience
April 5, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/65928
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