PLoS Biology (Mar 2020)

Crumbs2 mediates ventricular layer remodelling to form the spinal cord central canal.

  • Christine M Tait,
  • Kavitha Chinnaiya,
  • Elizabeth Manning,
  • Mariyam Murtaza,
  • John-Paul Ashton,
  • Nicholas Furley,
  • Chris J Hill,
  • C Henrique Alves,
  • Jan Wijnholds,
  • Kai S Erdmann,
  • Andrew Furley,
  • Penny Rashbass,
  • Raman M Das,
  • Kate G Storey,
  • Marysia Placzek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000470
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
p. e3000470

Abstract

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In the spinal cord, the central canal forms through a poorly understood process termed dorsal collapse that involves attrition and remodelling of pseudostratified ventricular layer (VL) cells. Here, we use mouse and chick models to show that dorsal ventricular layer (dVL) cells adjacent to dorsal midline Nestin(+) radial glia (dmNes+RG) down-regulate apical polarity proteins, including Crumbs2 (CRB2) and delaminate in a stepwise manner; live imaging shows that as one cell delaminates, the next cell ratchets up, the dmNes+RG endfoot ratchets down, and the process repeats. We show that dmNes+RG secrete a factor that promotes loss of cell polarity and delamination. This activity is mimicked by a secreted variant of Crumbs2 (CRB2S) which is specifically expressed by dmNes+RG. In cultured MDCK cells, CRB2S associates with apical membranes and decreases cell cohesion. Analysis of Crb2F/F/Nestin-Cre+/- mice, and targeted reduction of Crb2/CRB2S in slice cultures reveal essential roles for transmembrane CRB2 (CRB2TM) and CRB2S on VL cells and dmNes+RG, respectively. We propose a model in which a CRB2S-CRB2TM interaction promotes the progressive attrition of the dVL without loss of overall VL integrity. This novel mechanism may operate more widely to promote orderly progenitor delamination.