학술논문

LIF signaling regulates outer radial glial to interneuron fate during human cortical development.
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Stem Cell. 30(10)
Subject
cerebral cortex
human development
inhibitory interneurons
mechanisms of differentiation
neural progenitors
neurodevelopment
organoid models
pluripotent stem cells
radial glia
signaling mechanisms
Humans
Ependymoglial Cells
Cell Differentiation
Neurogenesis
Cerebral Cortex
Interneurons
Language
Abstract
Radial glial (RG) development is essential for cerebral cortex growth and organization. In humans, the outer radial glia (oRG) subtype is expanded and gives rise to diverse neurons and glia. However, the mechanisms regulating oRG differentiation are unclear. oRG cells express leukemia-inhibitory factor (LIF) receptors during neurogenesis, and consistent with a role in stem cell self-renewal, LIF perturbation impacts oRG proliferation in cortical tissue and organoids. Surprisingly, LIF treatment also increases the production of inhibitory interneurons (INs) in cortical cultures. Comparative transcriptomic analysis identifies that the enhanced IN population resembles INs produced in the caudal ganglionic eminence. To evaluate whether INs could arise from oRGs, we isolated primary oRG cells and cultured them with LIF. We observed the production of INs from oRG cells and an increase in IN abundance following LIF treatment. Our observations suggest that LIF signaling regulates the capacity of oRG cells to generate INs.