Spinal neuron diversity scales exponentially with swim-to-limb transformation during frog metamorphosis
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Author
Vijatovic, DavidISTA;
Toma, Florina Alexandra ISTA;
Harrington, Zoe PISTA
;
Sommer, Christoph MISTA
;
Hauschild, RobertISTA
;
Trevisan, Alexandra J.;
Chapman, Phillip;
Julseth, MaraISTA;
Brenner-Morton, Susan;
Gabitto, Mariano I.;
Dasen, Jeremy S.;
Bikoff, Jay B.
All



All
Corresponding author has ISTA affiliation
Grant
Abstract
Vertebrates exhibit a wide range of motor behaviors, ranging from swimming to complex limb-based movements. Here we take advantage of frog metamorphosis, which captures a swim-to-limb-based movement transformation during the development of a single organism, to explore changes in the underlying spinal circuits. We find that the tadpole spinal cord contains small and largely homogeneous populations of motor neurons (MNs) and V1 interneurons (V1s) at early escape swimming stages. These neuronal populations only modestly increase in number and subtype heterogeneity with the emergence of free swimming. In contrast, during frog metamorphosis and the emergence of limb movement, there is a dramatic expansion of MN and V1 interneuron number and transcriptional heterogeneity, culminating in cohorts of neurons that exhibit striking molecular similarity to mammalian motor circuits. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene disruption of the limb MN and V1 determinants FoxP1 and Engrailed-1, respectively, results in severe but selective deficits in tail and limb function. Our work thus demonstrates that neural diversity scales exponentially with increasing behavioral complexity and illustrates striking evolutionary conservation in the molecular organization and function of motor circuits across species.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2024-09-27
Journal Title
bioRxiv
Acknowledgement
We would like to thank the members of the Sweeney Lab (especially Stavros Papadopoulos and
Sophie Gobeil) for their contributions to this project and, in addition to the lab, Graziana Gatto
and Mario de Bono, for discussion, and support. We are also grateful to Tom Jessell and Chris
Kintner for their scientific insight and mentorship during the conception of this project. This
project would also not have been possible with the technical support of the Matthias Nowak,
Verena Mayer and the Aquatics as well as the Imaging and Optics Facility support teams
(ISTA). In addition, we thank our funding sources for providing the resources to do these
experiments: FTI Strategy Lower Austria Dissertation Grant Number FT121-D-046 (D.V.);
Horizon Europe ERC Starting Grant Number 101041551 (L.B.S., F.A.T. and D.V); Special
Research Program (SFB) of the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) Project number F7814-B (L.B.S);
NINDS 5R35NS116858 (J.S.D); CZI grant DAF2020-225401 (DOI): 10.37921/120055ratwvi
(R.H.); NIH grant number R01NS123116 (J.B.B); American Lebanese Syrian Associated
Charities (ALSAC) (J.B.B.); German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) IFI Grant Number
57515251-91853472 (Z.H.); and Project A.L.S. (S.B-M.).
Acknowledged SSUs
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