Evidence That Dmrta2 Acts through Repression of Pax6 in Cortical Patterning and Identification of a Mutation Impairing DNA Recognition Associated with Microcephaly in Human

  • Xueyi Shen
  • , Jithu Anirudhan
  • , Ambrin Fatima
  • , Estelle Plant
  • , Tünde Szemes
  • , Zélie Bouveret
  • , Marc Keruzore
  • , Sadia Kricha
  • , Xinsheng Nan
  • , Alba Sabaté San José
  • , Samuel Bianchin
  • , Bérénice Veraghen
  • , Louis Paul Delhaye
  • , Bilal Ahmad Mian
  • , Lubaba Bintee Khalid
  • , Farhan Ali
  • , Hijab Zahra
  • , Asmat Ali
  • , Mathias Toft
  • , Marc Dieu
  • Younes Achouri, Meng Li, Patricia Renard, Carine Van Lint, Coralie Poulard, Zafar Iqbal, Eric J. Bellefroid

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Dmrta2 (also designated Dmrt5) is a transcriptional regulator expressed in cortical progenitors in a caudomedialhigh/rostrolaterallow gradient with important roles at different steps of cortical development. Dmrta2 has been suggested to act in cortex development mainly by differential suppression of Pax6 and other homeobox transcription factors such as the ventral telencephalic regulator Gsx2, which remains to be fully demonstrated. Here we have addressed the epistatic relation between Pax6 and Dmrta2 by comparing phenotypes in mutant embryos or embryos overexpressing both genes in various allelic combinations. We show that Dmrta2 cooperates with Pax6 in the maintenance of cortical identity in dorsal telencephalic progenitors and that it acts as a transcriptional repressor of Pax6 to control cortical patterning. Mechanistically, we show that in P19 cells, Dmrta2 acts as a DNA binding-dependent repressor on the Pax6 E60 enhancer and that a point mutation that affects its DNA binding properties identified in a consanguineous family leads to agenesis of the corpus callosum, pachygyria, and the absence of the cingulate gyrus. Finally, we provide evidence that Dmrta2 binds components of the NuRD repressor complex and interacts with zinc finger proteins such as Zfp423. Together, our results highlight the importance and conserved function of Dmrta2 in cortical development and provide novel insights into its mechanism of action.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberENEURO.0377-24.2025
JournaleNeuro
Volume12
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2025

Keywords

  • cerebral cortex
  • microcephaly
  • neural progenitor
  • neurogenesis
  • patterning
  • transcription factor

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