The manuscript by Tsai et al. (935–945) is a tour de force analysis of a controversial issue in developmental neurobiology, namely the molecular basis of the devastating human brain malformation, type I lissencephaly (Lis1) (Jellinger, K., and A. Rett. 1976. Neuropadiatrie. 7:66–91). For several decades, defects in neuronal migration have been assumed to underlie all defects in cortical histogenesis. In the paper by Tsai et al., the authors use a variety of elegant approaches, including the first real-time imaging of cortical neurons with reduced levels of LIS1, to demonstrate that LIS1 and dynactin act as regulators of dynein during cortical histogenesis. A loss of LIS1 results in both a failure to exit the cortical germinal zone and abnormal neuronal process formation. Thus, the primary action of the mutation is to disrupt the production of neurons in the developing brain as well as their migration.
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12 September 2005
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September 12 2005
LIS-less neurons don't even make it to the starting gate
Mary E. Hatten
Mary E. Hatten
Laboratory of Developmental Neurobiology, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10021
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Mary E. Hatten
Laboratory of Developmental Neurobiology, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10021
Correspondence to Mary E. Hatten: [email protected]
Abbreviations used in this paper: CNS, central nervous system; Lis1, type 1 lissencephaly; nud, nuclear distribution gene; SVZ, subventricular zone; VZ, ventricular zone.
Received:
June 22 2005
Accepted:
August 02 2005
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
The Rockefeller University Press
2005
J Cell Biol (2005) 170 (6): 867–871.
Article history
Received:
June 22 2005
Accepted:
August 02 2005
Citation
Mary E. Hatten; LIS-less neurons don't even make it to the starting gate . J Cell Biol 12 September 2005; 170 (6): 867–871. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200506140
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