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Transient, afferent input-dependent, postnatal niche for neural progenitor cells in the cochlear nucleus.


ABSTRACT: In the cochlear nucleus (CN), the first central relay of the auditory pathway, the survival of neurons during the first weeks after birth depends on afferent innervation from the cochlea. Although input-dependent neuron survival has been extensively studied in the CN, neurogenesis has not been evaluated as a possible mechanism of postnatal plasticity. Here we show that new neurons are born in the CN during the critical period of postnatal plasticity. Coincidently, we found a population of neural progenitor cells that are controlled by a complex interplay of Wnt, Notch, and TGF?/BMP signaling, in which low levels of TGF?/BMP signaling are permissive for progenitor proliferation that is promoted by Wnt and Notch activation. We further show that cells with activated Wnt signaling reside in the CN and that these cells have high propensity for neurosphere formation. Cochlear ablation resulted in diminishment of progenitors and Wnt/?-catenin-active cells, suggesting that the neonatal CN maintains an afferent innervation-dependent population of progenitor cells that display active canonical Wnt signaling.

SUBMITTER: Volkenstein S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3761577 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Transient, afferent input-dependent, postnatal niche for neural progenitor cells in the cochlear nucleus.

Volkenstein Stefan S   Oshima Kazuo K   Sinkkonen Saku T ST   Corrales C Eduardo CE   Most Sam P SP   Chai Renjie R   Jan Taha A TA   van Amerongen Renée R   Cheng Alan G AG   Heller Stefan S  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20130812 35


In the cochlear nucleus (CN), the first central relay of the auditory pathway, the survival of neurons during the first weeks after birth depends on afferent innervation from the cochlea. Although input-dependent neuron survival has been extensively studied in the CN, neurogenesis has not been evaluated as a possible mechanism of postnatal plasticity. Here we show that new neurons are born in the CN during the critical period of postnatal plasticity. Coincidently, we found a population of neural  ...[more]

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