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Glycosphingolipid metabolic reprogramming drives neural differentiation.

Domenico RussoFloriana Della RagioneRiccardo RizzoEiji SugiyamaFrancesco ScalabrìKei HoriSerena CapassoLucia SticcoSalvatore FiorinielloRoberto De GregorioIlaria GranataMario R GuarracinoVittorio MaglioneLudger JohannesGian Carlo BellenchiMikio HoshinoMitsutoshi SetouMaurizio D'EspositoAlberto LuiniGiovanni D'Angelo
Published in: The EMBO journal (2017)
Neural development is accomplished by differentiation events leading to metabolic reprogramming. Glycosphingolipid metabolism is reprogrammed during neural development with a switch from globo- to ganglio-series glycosphingolipid production. Failure to execute this glycosphingolipid switch leads to neurodevelopmental disorders in humans, indicating that glycosphingolipids are key players in this process. Nevertheless, both the molecular mechanisms that control the glycosphingolipid switch and its function in neurodevelopment are poorly understood. Here, we describe a self-contained circuit that controls glycosphingolipid reprogramming and neural differentiation. We find that globo-series glycosphingolipids repress the epigenetic regulator of neuronal gene expression AUTS2. AUTS2 in turn binds and activates the promoter of the first and rate-limiting ganglioside-producing enzyme GM3 synthase, thus fostering the synthesis of gangliosides. By this mechanism, the globo-AUTS2 axis controls glycosphingolipid reprogramming and neural gene expression during neural differentiation, which involves this circuit in neurodevelopment and its defects in neuropathology.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • transcription factor
  • quantum dots
  • blood brain barrier
  • fluorescent probe