Engrailed transcription factors direct excitatory cerebellar neuron diversity and survival.
Anjana KrishnamurthyAndrew S LeeN Sumru BayinDaniel N StephenOlivia NasefZhimin LaoAlexandra L JoynerPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
The excitatory neurons of the three cerebellar nuclei (eCN) form the primary output for the cerebellar circuit. The medial eCN (eCNm) were recently divided into molecularly defined subdomains in the adult, however how they are established during development is not known. We define molecular subdomains of the eCNm using scRNA-seq and spatial expression analysis and show they evolve during embryogenesis to resemble the adult. Furthermore, the eCNm is transcriptionally divergent from the rest of the eCN by E14.5. We previously showed that loss of the homeobox genes En1 and En2 leads to death of a subset of embryonic eCNm. We demonstrate that mutation of En1/2 in embryonic eCNm results in cell death of specific posterior eCNm molecular subdomains and loss of TBR2 (EOMES) expression in an anterior subdomain, as well as reduced synaptic gene expression. We further reveal a similar function for EN1/2 in mediating TBR2 expression, neuron differentiation and survival in the two other cerebellar excitatory neuron types. Thus, our work defines embryonic eCNm molecular diversity and reveals conserved roles for EN1/2 in the cerebellar excitatory neuron lineage.