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Frizzled3 Controls Axonal Polarity and Intermediate Target Entry during Striatal Pathway Development.

Francesca MorelloAsheeta A PrasadKati RehbergRenata Vieira de SáNoelia Antón-BolañosEduardo Leyva-DiazYouri AdolfsFadel TissirGuillermina López-BenditoR Jeroen Pasterkamp
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Striatal axon pathways mediate complex physiological functions and are an important therapeutic target, underscoring the need to define how these connections are established. Remarkably, the molecular programs regulating striatal pathway development remain poorly characterized. Here, we determine the embryonic ontogeny of the two main striatal pathways (striatonigral and striatopallidal) and identify novel (non)cell-autonomous roles for the axon guidance receptor Frizzled3 in uncharacterized aspects of striatal pathway formation (i.e., anterior-posterior axon guidance in the striatum and axon entry into the globus pallidus). Further, our results link Frizzled3 to corridor guidepost cell development and suggest that an abnormal distribution of these cells has unexpected, widespread effects on the development of different axon tracts (i.e., striatal and thalamocortical axons).
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