Mesman_2016_Front.Mol.Neurosci_9_166

Reference

Title : Mest\/Peg1 Is Essential for the Development and Maintenance of a SNc Neuronal Subset - Mesman_2016_Front.Mol.Neurosci_9_166
Author(s) : Mesman S , van Hooft JA , Smidt MP
Ref : Front Mol Neurosci , 9 :166 , 2016
Abstract :

Mesodiencephalic dopaminergic (mdDA) neurons originate at the floor plate and floor plate-basal plate boundary of the midbrain ventricular zone. During development mdDA neurons are specified by a unique set of transcription factors and signaling cascades, to form the different molecular subsets of the mdDA neuronal population. In a time series micro-array study performed previously, mesoderm specific transcript (Mest) was found to be one of the most upregulated genes during early mdDA neuronal development. Here, we show that Mest transcript is expressed in the midbrain throughout development and becomes restricted to the substantia nigra (SNc) at late stages. In Mest KO animals mdDA neurons are progressively lost in the adult, mostly affecting the SNc, reflected by a 50% decrease of TH protein and DA release in the striatum and a reduction of climbing behavior. Analysis of Lrp6 KO embryos suggest a subtle opposite phenotype to the Mest KO, hinting toward the possibility that specific loss of mdDA neurons in Mest ablated animals could be due to affected WNT-signaling. Interestingly, the mdDA neuronal region affected by the loss of Mest remains relatively unaffected in Pitx3 mutants, suggesting that both genes are essential for the development and/or maintenance of different mdDA neuronal subsets within the SNc. Overall, the neuroanatomical and phenotypical consequences detected upon the loss of Mest, resemble the loss of SNc neurons and loss of movement control as seen in Parkinson's Disease (PD), suggesting that the Mest mouse model may be used as a model-system for PD.

PubMedSearch : Mesman_2016_Front.Mol.Neurosci_9_166
PubMedID: 28133444
Gene_locus related to this paper: human-MEST , mouse-MEST

Related information

Gene_locus human-MEST    mouse-MEST
Family MEST-like

Citations formats

Mesman S, van Hooft JA, Smidt MP (2016)
Mest\/Peg1 Is Essential for the Development and Maintenance of a SNc Neuronal Subset
Front Mol Neurosci 9 :166

Mesman S, van Hooft JA, Smidt MP (2016)
Front Mol Neurosci 9 :166