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LHX2 Interacts with the NuRD Complex and Regulates Cortical Neuron Subtype Determinants Fezf2 and Sox11.

Bhavana MuralidharanZeba KhatriUpasana MaheshwariRitika GuptaBasabdatta RoySaurabh J PradhanKrishanpal KarmodiyaHari PadmanabhanAshwin S ShettyChinthapalli BalajiUllas Kolthur-SeetharamJeffrey D MacklisSanjeev GalandeShubha Tole
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
The functional complexity of the cerebral cortex arises from an array of distinct neuronal subtypes with unique connectivity patterns that are produced from common progenitors. This study reveals that transcription factor LHX2 regulates the numbers of specific cortical output neuron subtypes by controlling the genes that are required to produce them. Loss or increase in LHX2 during neurogenesis is sufficient to increase or decrease, respectively, a particular subcerebrally projecting population. Mechanistically, LHX2 interacts with chromatin modifying protein complexes to edit the chromatin landscape of its targets Fezf2 and Sox11, which regulates their expression and consequently the identities of the neurons produced. Thus, LHX2 is a key component of the control network for producing neurons that will participate in cortical circuitry.
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