4.2 Article

A powerful transgenic tool for fate mapping and functional analysis of newly generated neurons

Journal

BMC NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-11-158

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Funding

  1. Initiative and Networking Fund in the framework of the Helmholtz Alliance of Systems Biology and of Mental Health in an Ageing Society [HA-215]
  2. Bayerischer Forschungsverbund ForNeuroCell [F2-F2410-10c/20697]
  3. European Mouse Mutagenesis Program (EUCOMM) [LSHM-CT-2005-018931]
  4. EU [LSHB-CT-2005-512146]
  5. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01GG0706]
  6. Hoffmann La Roche, Basel

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Background: Lack of appropriate tools and techniques to study fate and functional integration of newly generated neurons has so far hindered understanding of neurogenesis' relevance under physiological and pathological conditions. Current analyses are either dependent on mitotic labeling, for example BrdU-incorporation or retroviral infection, or on the detection of transient immature neuronal markers. Here, we report a transgenic mouse model (DCX CreERT2) for time-resolved fate analysis of newly generated neurons. This model is based on the expression of a tamoxifen-inducible Cre recombinase under the control of a doublecortin (DCX) promoter, which is specific for immature neuronal cells in the CNS. Results: In the DCX-CreERT2 transgenic mice, expression of CreERT2 was restricted to DCX+ cells. In the CNS of transgenic embryos and adult DCX-CreERT2 mice, tamoxifen administration caused the transient translocation of CreERT2 to the nucleus, allowing for the recombination of loxP-flanked sequences. In our system, tamoxifen administration at E14.5 resulted in reporter gene activation throughout the developing CNS of transgenic embryos. In the adult CNS, neurogenic regions were the primary sites of tamoxifen-induced reporter gene activation. In addition, reporter expression could also be detected outside of neurogenic regions in cells physiologically expressing DCX (e. g. piriform cortex, corpus callosum, hypothalamus). Four weeks after recombination, the vast majority of reporter-expressing cells were found to co-express NeuN, revealing the neuronal fate of DCX+ cells upon maturation. Conclusions: This first validation demonstrates that our new DCX-CreERT2 transgenic mouse model constitutes a powerful tool to investigate neurogenesis, migration and their long-term fate of neuronal precursors. Moreover, it allows for a targeted activation or deletion of specific genes in neuronal precursors and will thereby contribute to unravel the molecular mechanisms controlling neurogenesis.

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