Regulation of cerebral cortex folding by controlling neuronal migration via FLRT adhesion molecules

  • del Toro, D.
  • Ruff, T.
  • Cederfjäll, E.
  • Villalb, A.
  • Seyit-Bremer, G.
  • Borrell, V.
  • Klein, R.
Publication date
January 2017
Publisher
Elsevier BV

Abstract

The folding of the mammalian cerebral cortex into sulci and gyri is thought to be favored by the amplification of basal progenitor cells and their tangential migration. Here, we provide a molecular mechanism for the role of migration in this process by showing that changes in intercellular adhesion of migrating cortical neurons result in cortical folding. Mice with deletions of FLRT1 and FLRT3 adhesion molecules develop macroscopic sulci with preserved layered organization and radial glial morphology. Cortex folding in these mutants does not require progenitor cell amplification but is dependent on changes in neuron migration. Analyses and simulations suggest that sulcus formation in the absence of FLRT1/3 results from reduced intercellular...

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