Floor plate-derived neuropilin-2 functions as a secreted semaphoring sink to facilitate commissural axon midline crossing

Berenice Hernandez-Enriquez, Zhuhao Wu, Edward Martinez, Olav Olsen, Zaven Kaprielian, Patricia F. Maness, Yutaka Yoshida, Marc Tessier-Lavigne, Tracy S. Tran

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Commissural axon guidance depends on a myriad of cues expressed by intermediate targets. Secreted semaphorins signal through neuropilin-2/plexin-A1 receptor complexes on post-crossing commissural axons to mediate floor plate repulsion in the mouse spinal cord. Here, we show that neuropilin-2/plexin-A1 are also coexpressed on commissural axons prior to midline crossing and can mediate precrossing semaphorin-induced repulsion in vitro. How premature semaphorin-induced repulsion of precrossing axons is suppressed in vivo is not known. We discovered that a novel source of floor plate-derived, but not axon-derived, neuropilin-2 is required for precrossing axon pathfinding. Floor plate-specific deletion of neuropilin-2 significantly reduces the presence of precrossing axons in the ventral spinal cord, which can be rescued by inhibiting plexin-A1 signaling in vivo. Our results showthat floor platederived neuropilin-2 is developmentally regulated, functioning as a molecular sink to sequester semaphorins, preventing premature repulsion of precrossing axons prior to subsequent down-regulation, and allowing for semaphorin- mediated repulsion of post-crossing axons.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2617-2632
Number of pages16
JournalGenes and Development
Volume29
Issue number24
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Dec 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Explant cultures
  • Neural development
  • Pathfinding
  • Semaphorin 3B
  • Spinal cord

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