Publications by authors named "C Beclin"

Neural stem cell populations generate a wide spectrum of neuronal and glial cell types in a highly ordered fashion. MicroRNAs are essential regulators of this process. T-UCstem1 is a long non-coding RNA containing an ultraconserved element, and in vitro analyses in pluripotent stem cells provided evidence that it regulates the balance between proliferation and differentiation.

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Different subtypes of interneurons, destined for the olfactory bulb, are continuously generated by neural stem cells located in the ventricular and subventricular zones along the lateral forebrain ventricles of mice. Neuronal identity in the olfactory bulb depends on the existence of defined microdomains of pre-determined neural stem cells along the ventricle walls. The molecular mechanisms underlying positional identity of these neural stem cells are poorly understood.

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Adult neurogenesis in the olfactory bulb (OB) is considered as a competition in which neurons scramble during a critical selection period for integration and survival. Moreover, newborn neurons are thought to replace pre-existing ones that die. Despite indirect evidence supporting this model, systematic in vivo observations are still scarce.

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Article Synopsis
  • Postnatal neurogenesis in the olfactory bulb involves stem cells producing progenitors that migrate and become mostly inhibitory interneurons, with some developing into glutamatergic neurons.
  • The transcription factor NeuroD6 plays a key role in generating glutamatergic juxtaglomerular cells (JGCs) in the dorsal neurogenic lineage, which shows specific and temporary expression patterns.
  • Research reveals that glutamatergic JGCs have complex axon projections within the olfactory bulb and differ from GABAergic interneurons in their ability to survive without sensory input, highlighting varied responses to environmental changes.
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In the perinatal and adult forebrain, regionalized neural stem cells lining the ventricular walls produce different types of olfactory bulb interneurons. Although these postnatal stem cells are lineage related to their embryonic counterparts that produce, for example, cortical, septal, and striatal neurons, their output at the level of neuronal phenotype changes dramatically. Tiveron et al.

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