Login / Signup

Nests of dividing neuroblasts sustain interneuron production for the developing human brain.

Mercedes F ParedesCristina MoraQuetzal Flores-RamirezArantxa Cebrian-SillaAshley Del DossoPhillip LarimerJiapei ChenGugene KangSusana Gonzalez-GraneroEric GarciaJulia ChuRyan N DelgadoJennifer A CotterVivian TangJulien SpatazzaKirsten ObernierJaime Ferrer LozanoMaximo VentoJulia ScottColin StudholmeTomasz J NowakowskiArnold R KriegsteinMichael Clark OldhamAndrea R HasenstaubJose Manuel García-VerdugoArturo Álvarez-BuyllaEric J Huang
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
The human cortex contains inhibitory interneurons derived from the medial ganglionic eminence (MGE), a germinal zone in the embryonic ventral forebrain. How this germinal zone generates sufficient interneurons for the human brain remains unclear. We found that the human MGE (hMGE) contains nests of proliferative neuroblasts with ultrastructural and transcriptomic features that distinguish them from other progenitors in the hMGE. When dissociated hMGE cells are transplanted into the neonatal mouse brain, they reform into nests containing proliferating neuroblasts that generate young neurons that migrate extensively into the mouse forebrain and mature into different subtypes of functional interneurons. Together, these results indicate that the nest organization and sustained proliferation of neuroblasts in the hMGE provide a mechanism for the extended production of interneurons for the human forebrain.
Keyphrases