During metazoan central nervous system (CNS) development, neural precursor cells undergo multiple rounds of asymmetric cell divisions producing either neuronal or glial progenitor cells with each division. Underpinning the formation of these uniquely fated neural cells are integrated gene expression regulatory networks that establish distinct functional cellular identities. The objective of this project is to identify and characterize transcription factor cis-regulatory networks controlling cell-identity decisions in the developing CNS. Although much is known about early developmental decision leading to the formation of neural precursor cells, little is understood about subsequent cell fate decisions that generate the unique functional identities of neurons or glia. The identification and functional characterization of the molecules and pathways/circuits underlying these cell-fate decisions remain a central goal of neurobiology. We have discovered that in the developing Drosophila CNS most, if not all, neural precursor cells transition through a series of synchronized gene expression programs during their asymmetric divisions. These temporal windows of gene expression are marked by the sequential expression of different transcription factors that, in turn help establish unique neural cell types. Our studies have revealed that the temporal domains are part of a global CNS regulatory network that coordinates cell fate-determining events in both the developing embryonic brain and in the ventral cord. These studies have also demonstrated that when cultured in isolation, Drosophila neural precursor cells maintain the correct temporal shifts in transcription factor gene expression. This cellular independence provides evidence that once neural lineage development is initiated no additional signaling cues between stem cells or adjacent tissues are required to trigger this cascade of regulatory gene expression. More recent studies from our lab have identified the cis-regulatory enhancers that control the expression of specific transcription factor genes during different temporal windows of neural precursor cell lineage development. Our evolutionary comparative DNA sequence analysis of these enhancers have revealed that they contain clusters of conserved DNA sequence blocks and many of these genus invariant sequences contain DNA-binding sites for transcription factors. Functional analysis of the conserved cis-regulatory DNA that controls one of the earliest expressed cell-identity determinants, the Zn-finger Nerfin-1 transcription factor, and the enhancers that regulates a late expressing cell-determinant, the Zn-finger gene castor, reveals that their dynamic expression in the developing nervous system is controlled by multiple independent enhancers that regulate different aspects of their spatial and temporal expression patterns. Using a new set of comparative genomics tools that we have developed (described in our accompanying project Identification of Functionally Related Drosophila cis-Regulatory DNA NS009413-02) we have identified additional early neural precursor enhancers based on their shared conserved sequences with nerfin-1 enhancer. We have also used these comparative genomic tools to identify potential Castor regulated enhancers that contain highly conserved DNA-binding sites for the Castor transcription factor. We are currently pursuing the characterization of these enhancers to determine if their cis-regulatory behavior is altered in different mutant transcription factor backgrounds. Additional information and publications describing this work can be obtained at our web site (http://intra.ninds.nih.gov/investigators.asp).

Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
22
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$639,197
Indirect Cost
City
State
Country
Zip Code
Brody, Thomas; Yavatkar, Amarendra S; Park, Dong Sun et al. (2017) Flavivirus and Filovirus EvoPrinters: New alignment tools for the comparative analysis of viral evolution. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 11:e0005673
Ross, Jermaine; Kuzin, Alexander; Brody, Thomas et al. (2015) cis-regulatory analysis of the Drosophila pdm locus reveals a diversity of neural enhancers. BMC Genomics 16:700
Wang, Yu-Chun; Yang, Jacob S; Johnston, Rebecca et al. (2014) Drosophila intermediate neural progenitors produce lineage-dependent related series of diverse neurons. Development 141:253-8
Awasaki, Takeshi; Kao, Chih-Fei; Lee, Ying-Jou et al. (2014) Making Drosophila lineage-restricted drivers via patterned recombination in neuroblasts. Nat Neurosci 17:631-7
Matyi, S A; Dupre, J M; Johnson, W L et al. (2013) Isolation and characterization of Staphylococcus aureus strains from a Paso del Norte dairy. J Dairy Sci 96:3535-42
Kundu, Mukta; Kuzin, Alexander; Lin, Tzu-Yang et al. (2013) cis-regulatory complexity within a large non-coding region in the Drosophila genome. PLoS One 8:e60137
Roessler, Erich; Hu, Ping; Hong, Sung-Kook et al. (2012) Unique alterations of an ultraconserved non-coding element in the 3'UTR of ZIC2 in holoprosencephaly. PLoS One 7:e39026
Kuzin, Alexander; Kundu, Mukta; Ross, Jermaine et al. (2012) The cis-regulatory dynamics of the Drosophila CNS determinant castor are controlled by multiple sub-pattern enhancers. Gene Expr Patterns 12:261-72
Brody, Thomas; Yavatkar, Amarendra S; Kuzin, Alexander et al. (2012) Use of a Drosophila genome-wide conserved sequence database to identify functionally related cis-regulatory enhancers. Dev Dyn 241:169-89
Kuzin, Alexander; Kundu, Mukta; Brody, Thomas et al. (2011) Functional analysis of conserved sequences within a temporally restricted neural precursor cell enhancer. Mech Dev 128:165-77

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