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BioMed Central Blog

Thursday Feb 07, 2008

Signaling at spinal cord boundaries; a Journal of Biology minireview

The central and peripheral nervous systems of vertebrates are partitioned at specific points within the spinal cord, ensuring that the cell bodies of neurons from each system are not mixed, while still allowing axons to be connected. Previous studies have identified a transient population of cells responsible for this partitioning, termed boundary cap cells. The molecular mechanism of boundary cap formation and function is discussed in a recent minireview for Journal of Biology by Sophie Chauvet and Geneviève Rougon, highlighting two interesting studies published in Neural Development, which illustrate a role for semaphorin-plexin signaling in this process.

The role of semaphorin 6A (Sema6A) was determined by Bron et al. through the study of chick and mouse embryos deficient in either Semaphorin 6A or neuropilin-2. This study illustrates the importance of the interaction between these two molecules in preventing the exit of motor neuron cell bodies from the spinal cord, and identifies Plexin-A2 as a putative interacting partner in this signaling pathway. Using RNA interference, Bron et al. also demonstrate that MICAL3, expressed by motor neurons, is an essential downstream component of this signaling pathway in chick.

In a related study, Mauti et al. showed that depletion of Sema6A expression leads to the ectopic migration of motor neuron cell bodies, a phenotype mimicking the ablation of boundary cap cells. In contrast to the study by Bron et al., the authors identified Plexin-A1 or Plexin-A4, and not Plexin-A2, as candidate interacting molecules in this process. These important findings are discussed in the literature evaluation service, Faculty of 1000 (Biology).

In conjunction, these studies shed new light on the role of extracellular cues in establishing the positional identity of developing neuronal circuits. While the minireview in Journal of Biology highlights the important advance resulting from combining these findings, it also discusses the interesting discrepancies between the two studies.

 

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