4931414P19Rik, a microglia chemoattractant secreted by neural progenitors, modulates neuronal migration during corticogenesis

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Abstract

Communication between the nervous and immune system is crucial for development, homeostasis and response to injury. Before the onset of neurogenesis, microglia populate the central nervous system, serving as resident immune cells over the course of life. Here, we describe new roles of an uncharacterized transcript upregulated by neurogenic progenitors during mouse corticogenesis: 4931414P19Rik (hereafter named P19). Overexpression of P19 cell-extrinsically inhibited neuronal migration and acted as chemoattractant of microglial cells. Interestingly, effects on neuronal migration were found to result directly from P19 secretion by neural progenitors triggering microglia accumulation within the P19 targeted area. Our findings highlight the crucial role of microglia during brain development and identify P19 as a previously unreported player in the neuro-immune crosstalk.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numberdev201574
JournalDevelopment (Cambridge, England)
Volume150
Issue number9
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2023
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMedCentral PMC10163356
Scopus 85160954611

Keywords

Keywords

  • Animals, Mice, Microglia, Neurogenesis/physiology, Central Nervous System, Immune System, Cell Movement, Brain/physiology

Library keywords