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Microcephaly Gene Links Trithorax and REST/NRSF to Control Neural Stem Cell Proliferation and Differentiation
- Yang, Yawei J;
- Baltus, Andrew E;
- Mathew, Rebecca S;
- Murphy, Elisabeth A;
- Evrony, Gilad D;
- Gonzalez, Dilenny M;
- Wang, Estee P;
- Marshall-Walker, Christine A;
- Barry, Brenda J;
- Murn, Jernej;
- Tatarakis, Antonis;
- Mahajan, Muktar A;
- Samuels, Herbert H;
- Shi, Yang;
- Golden, Jeffrey A;
- Mahajnah, Muhammad;
- Shenhav, Ruthie;
- Walsh, Christopher A
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2012.10.043Abstract
Microcephaly is a neurodevelopmental disorder causing significantly reduced cerebral cortex size. Many known microcephaly gene products localize to centrosomes, regulating cell fate and proliferation. Here, we identify and characterize a nuclear zinc finger protein, ZNF335/NIF-1, as a causative gene for severe microcephaly, small somatic size, and neonatal death. Znf335 null mice are embryonically lethal, and conditional knockout leads to severely reduced cortical size. RNA-interference and postmortem human studies show that ZNF335 is essential for neural progenitor self-renewal, neurogenesis, and neuronal differentiation. ZNF335 is a component of a vertebrate-specific, trithorax H3K4-methylation complex, directly regulating REST/NRSF, a master regulator of neural gene expression and cell fate, as well as other essential neural-specific genes. Our results reveal ZNF335 as an essential link between H3K4 complexes and REST/NRSF and provide the first direct genetic evidence that this pathway regulates human neurogenesis and neuronal differentiation.
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