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Forebrain Eml1 depletion reveals early centrosomal dysfunction causing subcortical heterotopia

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Yiğit, Berfu Nur
Özlü, Nurhan

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Zaidi,Donia
Chinnappa,Kaviya
Viola,Valeria
Cifuentes-Diaz,Carmen
Jabali,Ammar
Uzquiano,Ana
Lemesre,Emilie
Perez,Franck
Ladewig,Julia
Ferent,Julien

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Mechanisms leading to abnormal distribution of neural progenitors during cortical development in the context of subcortical heterotopia associated with EML1 mutations remain unknown. Using a forebrain-specific mouse model and mutant human cells, this work innovatively demonstrates that by restoring microtubule function, abnormal progenitor distribution and heterotopic volume are significantly reduced. Subcortical heterotopia is a cortical malformation associated with epilepsy, intellectual disability, and an excessive number of cortical neurons in the white matter. Echinoderm microtubule-associated protein like 1 (EML1) mutations lead to subcortical heterotopia, associated with abnormal radial glia positioning in the cortical wall, prior to malformation onset. This perturbed distribution of proliferative cells is likely to be a critical event for heterotopia formation;however, the underlying mechanisms remain unexplained. This study aimed to decipher the early cellular alterations leading to abnormal radial glia. In a forebrain conditional Eml1 mutant model and human patient cells, primary cilia and centrosomes are altered. Microtubule dynamics and cell cycle kinetics are also abnormal in mouse mutant radial glia. By rescuing microtubule formation in Eml1 mutant embryonic brains, abnormal radial glia delamination and heterotopia volume were significantly reduced. Thus, our new model of subcortical heterotopia reveals the causal link between Eml1's function in microtubule regulation and cell position, both critical for correct cortical development.

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Journal of Cell Biology

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Rockefeller University Press

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Cell biology

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