Extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversity

Temporal patterning of neural progenitors leads to the sequential production of diverse neurons. To understand how extrinsic cues influence intrinsic temporal programs, we studied Drosophila mushroom body progenitors (neuroblasts) that sequentially produce only three neuronal types: γ, then α’β’, fo...

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Main Authors: Anthony M Rossi, Claude Desplan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd 2020-07-01
Series:eLife
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elifesciences.org/articles/58880
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spelling doaj-e4decacb54be4b16806ccf53abaa8a822021-05-05T21:17:02ZengeLife Sciences Publications LtdeLife2050-084X2020-07-01910.7554/eLife.58880Extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversityAnthony M Rossi0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9345-7939Claude Desplan1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6914-1413Department of Biology, New York University, New York, United StatesDepartment of Biology, New York University, New York, United StatesTemporal patterning of neural progenitors leads to the sequential production of diverse neurons. To understand how extrinsic cues influence intrinsic temporal programs, we studied Drosophila mushroom body progenitors (neuroblasts) that sequentially produce only three neuronal types: γ, then α’β’, followed by αβ. Opposing gradients of two RNA-binding proteins Imp and Syp comprise the intrinsic temporal program. Extrinsic activin signaling regulates the production of α’β’ neurons but whether it affects the intrinsic temporal program was not known. We show that the activin ligand Myoglianin from glia regulates the temporal factor Imp in mushroom body neuroblasts. Neuroblasts missing the activin receptor Baboon have a delayed intrinsic program as Imp is higher than normal during the α’β’ temporal window, causing the loss of α’β’ neurons, a decrease in αβ neurons, and a likely increase in γ neurons, without affecting the overall number of neurons produced. Our results illustrate that an extrinsic cue modifies an intrinsic temporal program to increase neuronal diversity.https://elifesciences.org/articles/58880temporal patterningDrosophilamushroom bodykenyon cellsactivinmyoglianin
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony M Rossi
Claude Desplan
spellingShingle Anthony M Rossi
Claude Desplan
Extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversity
eLife
temporal patterning
Drosophila
mushroom body
kenyon cells
activin
myoglianin
author_facet Anthony M Rossi
Claude Desplan
author_sort Anthony M Rossi
title Extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversity
title_short Extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversity
title_full Extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversity
title_fullStr Extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversity
title_full_unstemmed Extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversity
title_sort extrinsic activin signaling cooperates with an intrinsic temporal program to increase mushroom body neuronal diversity
publisher eLife Sciences Publications Ltd
series eLife
issn 2050-084X
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Temporal patterning of neural progenitors leads to the sequential production of diverse neurons. To understand how extrinsic cues influence intrinsic temporal programs, we studied Drosophila mushroom body progenitors (neuroblasts) that sequentially produce only three neuronal types: γ, then α’β’, followed by αβ. Opposing gradients of two RNA-binding proteins Imp and Syp comprise the intrinsic temporal program. Extrinsic activin signaling regulates the production of α’β’ neurons but whether it affects the intrinsic temporal program was not known. We show that the activin ligand Myoglianin from glia regulates the temporal factor Imp in mushroom body neuroblasts. Neuroblasts missing the activin receptor Baboon have a delayed intrinsic program as Imp is higher than normal during the α’β’ temporal window, causing the loss of α’β’ neurons, a decrease in αβ neurons, and a likely increase in γ neurons, without affecting the overall number of neurons produced. Our results illustrate that an extrinsic cue modifies an intrinsic temporal program to increase neuronal diversity.
topic temporal patterning
Drosophila
mushroom body
kenyon cells
activin
myoglianin
url https://elifesciences.org/articles/58880
work_keys_str_mv AT anthonymrossi extrinsicactivinsignalingcooperateswithanintrinsictemporalprogramtoincreasemushroombodyneuronaldiversity
AT claudedesplan extrinsicactivinsignalingcooperateswithanintrinsictemporalprogramtoincreasemushroombodyneuronaldiversity
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