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Erratic and blood vessel-guided migration of astrocyte progenitors in the cerebral cortex.

Hidenori TabataMegumi SasakiMasakazu AgetsumaHitomi SanoYuki HirotaMichio MiyajimaKanehiro HayashiTakao HondaMasashi NishikawaYutaka InagumaHidenori ItoHirohide TakebayashiMasatsugu EmaKazuhiro IkenakaJunichi NabekuraKoh-Ichi NagataKazunori Nakajima
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Astrocytes are one of the most abundant cell types in the mammalian brain. They play essential roles in synapse formation, maturation, and elimination. However, how astrocytes migrate into the gray matter to accomplish these processes is poorly understood. Here, we show that, by combinational analyses of in vitro and in vivo time-lapse observations and lineage traces, astrocyte progenitors move rapidly and irregularly within the developing cortex, which we call erratic migration. Astrocyte progenitors also adopt blood vessel-guided migration. These highly motile progenitors are generated in the restricted prenatal stages and differentiate into protoplasmic astrocytes in the gray matter, whereas postnatally generated progenitors do not move extensively and differentiate into fibrous astrocytes in the white matter. We found Cxcr4/7, and integrin β1 regulate the blood vessel-guided migration, and their functional blocking disrupts their positioning. This study provides insight into astrocyte development and may contribute to understanding the pathogenesis caused by their defects.
Keyphrases
  • white matter
  • functional connectivity
  • single cell
  • resting state
  • pregnant women
  • multidrug resistant
  • multiple sclerosis
  • stem cells
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • cell therapy