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  4. Neurogenesis redirects β-catenin from adherens junctions to the nucleus to promote axonal growth
 
research article

Neurogenesis redirects β-catenin from adherens junctions to the nucleus to promote axonal growth

Herrera, Antonio  
•
Menendez, Anghara
•
Ochoa, Andrea
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August 1, 2023
Development

Here, we show that, in the developing spinal cord, after the early Wnt-mediated Tcf transcription activation that confers dorsal identity to neural stem cells, neurogenesis redirects beta-catenin from the adherens junctions to the nucleus to stimulate Tcfoependent transcription in a Wnt-independent manner. This new beta-catenin activity regulates genes implicated in several aspects of contralateral axon growth, including axon guidance and adhesion. Using liv e imaging of ex-vivo chick neural tube, we showed that the nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin and the rise in Tcfoependent transcription both initiate before the dismantling of the adherens junctions and remain during the axon elongation process. Notably, we demonstrated that beta-catenin activity in post-mitotic cells depends on TCF7L2 and is central to spinal commissural axon growth. Together, our results reveal Wnt-independent Tcf/beta-catenin regulation of genes that control the growth and guidance of commissural axons in chick spinal cord.

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document.pdf

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Publisher's Version

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http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85

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openaccess

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CC BY

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9.95 MB

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Adobe PDF

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e2e7cbb743343e175d31d249fce2d9c4

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