T. Shimazaki et al., A role for the POU-III transcription factor Brn-4 in the regulation of striatal neuron precursor differentiation, EMBO J, 18(2), 1999, pp. 444-456
Both insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and brain-derived neurotrophic fa
ctor (BDNF) induce the differentiation of post-mitotic neuronal precursors,
derived from embryonic day 14 (E14) mouse striatal multipotent stem cells.
Here we ask whether this differentiation is mediated by a member of the PO
U-III class of neural transcription factors. Exposure of stem cell progeny
to either IGF-I or BDNF resulted in a rapid upregulation of Brn-4 mRNA and
protein. Indirect immunocytochemistry with Brn-4 antiserum showed that the
protein was expressed in newly generated neurons. Other POU-III genes, such
as Brn-1 and Brn-2, did not exhibit this upregulation. Basic FGF, a mitoge
n for these neuronal precursors, did not stimulate Brn-4 expression. In the
E14 mouse striatum, Brn-4-immunoreactive cells formed a boundary between t
he nestin-immunoreactive cells of the ventricular zone and the beta-tubulin
-immunoreactive neurons migrating into the mantle zone. Loss of Brn-4 funct
ion during the differentiation of stem cell-derived or primary E14 striatal
neuron precursors, by inclusion of antisense oligonucleotides, caused a re
duction in the number of beta-tubulin-immunoreactive neurons. These finding
s suggest that Brn-4 mediates, at least in part, the actions of epigenetic
signals that induce striatal neuron-precursor differentiation.