Development of an L-type Ca2+ channel-dependent Ca2+ transient during the radial migration of cortical excitatory neurons

•Cacna1c and Cacna1d transcripts were upregulated in radially migrating excitatory neurons in the IZ.•Migrating excitatory neurons exhibited spontaneous Ca2+ transients throughout the IZ.•Involvement of LTCCs in the Ca2+ transients in the IZ upper layer.•Migration stage-dependent enhancement of LTCC...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience research 2021-08, Vol.169, p.17-26
Hauptverfasser: Horigane, Shin-ichiro, Hamada, Shun, Kamijo, Satoshi, Yamada, Hirokazu, Yamasaki, Miwako, Watanabe, Masahiko, Bito, Haruhiko, Ohtsuka, Toshihisa, Takemoto-Kimura, Sayaka
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Cacna1c and Cacna1d transcripts were upregulated in radially migrating excitatory neurons in the IZ.•Migrating excitatory neurons exhibited spontaneous Ca2+ transients throughout the IZ.•Involvement of LTCCs in the Ca2+ transients in the IZ upper layer.•Migration stage-dependent enhancement of LTCC-mediated Ca2+ transients was observed. Increasing evidence has shown that voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channels (LTCCs) are crucial for neurodevelopmental events, including neuronal differentiation/migration and neurite morphogenesis/extension. However, the time course of their functional maturation during the development of excitatory neurons remains unknown. Using a combination of fluorescence in situ hybridization and in utero electroporation-based labeling, we found that the transcripts of Cacna1c and Cacna1d, which encode the LTCC pore-forming subunits, were upregulated in the intermediate zone (IZ) during radial migration. Ca2+ imaging using GCaMP6s in acute brain slices showed spontaneous Ca2+ transients in migrating neurons throughout the IZ. Neurons in the IZ upper layer, especially in the multipolar-to-bipolar transition layer (TL), exhibited more frequent Ca2+ transients than adjacent layers and responded to FPL64176, a potent activator of LTCC. Consistently, nimodipine, an LTCC blocker, inhibited spontaneous Ca2+ transients in neurons in the TL. Collectively, we showed a hitherto unknown increased prevalence of LTCC-dependent Ca2+ transients in the TL of the IZ upper layer during the radial migration of excitatory neurons, which could be essential for the regulation of Ca2+-dependent neurodevelopmental processes.
ISSN:0168-0102
1872-8111
DOI:10.1016/j.neures.2020.06.003