Citation

Poulopoulos A, Davis P, Brandenburg C, Itoh Y, Galazo MJ, Greig LC, Romanowski AJ, Budnik B, Macklis JD. 2024. Symmetry in levels of axon-axon homophilic adhesion establishes topography in the corpus callosum and development of connectivity between brain hemispheres. bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology. Pubmed: 38585721 DOI:10.1101/2024.03.28.587108

Abstract

Specific and highly diverse connectivity between functionally specialized regions of the nervous system is controlled at multiple scales, from anatomically organized connectivity following macroscopic axon tracts to individual axon target-finding and synapse formation. Identifying mechanisms that enable entire subpopulations of related neurons to project their axons with regional specificity within stereotyped tracts to form appropriate long-range connectivity is key to understanding brain development, organization, and function. Here, we investigate how axons of the cerebral cortex form precise connections between the two cortical hemispheres via the corpus callosum. We identify topographic principles of the developing trans-hemispheric callosal tract that emerge through intrinsic guidance executed by growing axons in the corpus callosum within the first postnatal week in mice. Using micro-transplantation of regionally distinct neurons, subtype-specific growth cone purification, subcellular proteomics, and in utero gene manipulation, we investigate guidance mechanisms of transhemispheric axons. We find that adhesion molecule levels instruct tract topography and target field guidance. We propose a model in which transcallosal axons in the developing brain perform a "handshake" that is guided through co-fasciculation with symmetric contralateral axons, resulting in the stereotyped homotopic connectivity between the brain's hemispheres.

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Photo of Jeffrey D. Macklis

Jeffrey Macklis investigates molecular controls and mechanisms over neuron subtype specification, development, diversity, axon guidance-circuit formation, and pathology in the cerebral cortex. His lab seeks to apply developmental controls toward brain and spinal cord regeneration and directed differentiation for in vitro mechanistic modeling using human assembloids.

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