Notch Activity Levels Control the Balance between Quiescence and Recruitment of Adult Neural Stem Cells

Prisca Chapouton(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), P. Skupien(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Birgit Hesl(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Marion Coolen(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), John C. Moore(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Romain Madelaine(Centre de Biologie du Développement), E. Kremmer(Center for Environmental Health), Theresa Faus-Keßler(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Patrick Blader(Centre de Biologie du Développement), Nathan D. Lawson(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Laure Bally‐Cuif(Laboratoire de Neurobiologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire)
Journal of Neuroscience
June 9, 2010
Cited by 258Open Access
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Abstract

The limited generation of neurons during adulthood is controlled by a balance between quiescence and recruitment of neural stem cells (NSCs). We use here the germinal zone of the zebrafish adult telencephalon to examine how the frequency of NSC divisions is regulated. We show, using several in vivo techniques, that progenitors transit back and forth between the quiescent and dividing state, according to varying levels of Notch activity: Notch induction drives progenitors into quiescence, whereas blocking Notch massively reinitiates NSC division and subsequent commitment toward becoming neurons. Notch activation appears predominantly triggered by newly recruited progenitors onto their neighbors, suggesting an involvement of Notch in a self-limiting mechanism, once neurogenesis is started. These results identify for the first time a lateral inhibition-like mechanism in the context of adult neurogenesis and suggest that the equilibrium between quiescence and neurogenesis in the adult brain is controlled by fluctuations of Notch activity, thereby regulating the amount of adult-born neurons.


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