Consensus Paper: Cerebellar Development

Ketty Leto(University of Turin), Marife Arancillo(Neurological Research Institute), Esther B. E. Becker(University of Oxford), Annalisa Buffo(University of Turin), Chin Chiang(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Baojin Ding(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), William B. Dobyns(University of Washington), Isabelle Dusart(Sorbonne Université), Parthiv Haldipur, Mary E. Hatten(Rockefeller University), Mikio Hoshino(National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry), Alexandra L. Joyner(Kettering University), Masanobu Kano(The University of Tokyo), Daniel L. Kilpatrick(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Noriyuki Koibuchi(Gunma University), Silvia Marino(Queen Mary University of London), Salvador Martı́nez(Universidad de Murcia), Kathleen J. Millen, Thomas O Millner(Queen Mary University of London), Takaki Miyata(Nagoya University), Elena Parmigiani(Neuroscience Institute), Karl Schilling(University of Bonn), Gabriella Sekerková(Northwestern University), Roy V. Sillitoe(Baylor College of Medicine), Constantino Sotelo(Sorbonne Université), Naofumi Uesaka(The University of Tokyo), Annika K. Wefers(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Richard Wingate(King's College London), Richard Hawkes(University of Calgary)
The Cerebellum
October 6, 2015
Cited by 497Open Access
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Abstract

The development of the mammalian cerebellum is orchestrated by both cell-autonomous programs and inductive environmental influences. Here, we describe the main processes of cerebellar ontogenesis, highlighting the neurogenic strategies used by developing progenitors, the genetic programs involved in cell fate specification, the progressive changes of structural organization, and some of the better-known abnormalities associated with developmental disorders of the cerebellum.


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