Publications by authors named "Jun-Liszt Li"

Article Synopsis
  • The subcommissural organ (SCO) is a brain gland whose function remains largely unclear, despite being present in a variety of species, including humans.
  • A comparison of gene expression in the SCO versus non-SCO brain areas revealed three key genes (Sspo, Car3, and Spdef) that are highly active in the SCO.
  • Genetic removal of SCO cells during embryonic development led to significant brain issues like hydrocephalus and impaired neuron growth, but introducing certain peptides from the SCO helped to alleviate these developmental problems.
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Article Synopsis
  • The subcommissural organ (SCO) is a brain gland found in various species, but its specific functions remain largely unclear.
  • Research identified three genes that are significantly active in the SCO and showed that disrupting these genes in mice led to severe brain issues, including hydrocephalus and neuronal development problems.
  • The study also discovered three peptides produced by the SCO that, when reintroduced into affected brain areas, helped mitigate developmental defects, highlighting the SCO's essential role in brain development.
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Achieving uniform optical resolution for a large tissue sample is a major challenge for deep imaging. For conventional tissue clearing methods, loss of resolution and quality in deep regions is inevitable due to limited transparency. Here we describe the Transparent Embedding Solvent System (TESOS) method, which combines tissue clearing, transparent embedding, sectioning and block-face imaging.

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Astrocytes are the largest glial population in the mammalian brain. However, we have a minimal understanding of astrocyte development, especially fate specification in different regions of the brain. Through lineage tracing of the progenitors of the third ventricle (3V) wall via in-utero electroporation in the embryonic mouse brain, we show the fate specification and migration pattern of astrocytes derived from radial glia along the 3V wall.

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Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) and spinal cord cavernous malformations (SCCMs) are common vascular abnormalities of the CNS that can lead to seizure, haemorrhage and other neurological deficits. Approximately 85% of patients present with sporadic (versus congenital) CCMs. Somatic mutations in MAP3K3 and PIK3CA were recently reported in patients with sporadic CCM, yet it remains unknown whether MAP3K3 mutation is sufficient to induce CCMs.

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Although frameshift mutations lead to 22% of inherited Mendelian disorders in humans, there is no efficient in vivo gene therapy strategy available to date, particularly in nondividing cells. Here, we show that nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ)-mediated nonrandom editing profiles compensate the frameshift mutation in the Pcdh15 gene and restore the lost mechanotransduction function in postmitotic hair cells of Pcdh15 mice, an animal model of human nonsyndromic deafness DFNB23. Identified by an ex vivo evaluation system in cultured cochlear explants, the selected guide RNA restores reading frame in approximately 50% of indel products and recovers mechanotransduction in more than 70% of targeted hair cells.

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Nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT) is the rate-limiting enzyme in the NAD salvage pathway. Our previous study demonstrated that deletion of NAMPT gene in projection neurons using Thy1-NAMPT conditional knockout (cKO) mice causes neuronal degeneration, muscle atrophy, neuromuscular junction abnormalities, paralysis and eventually death. Here we conducted a combined metabolomic and transcriptional profiling study in an attempt to further investigate the mechanism of neuronal degeneration at metabolite and mRNA levels after NAMPT deletion.

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