eLife (Jul 2024)

The scheduling of adolescence with Netrin-1 and UNC5C

  • Daniel Hoops,
  • Robert Kyne,
  • Samer Salameh,
  • Del MacGowan,
  • Radu Gabriel Avramescu,
  • Elise Ewing,
  • Alina Tao He,
  • Taylor Orsini,
  • Anais Durand,
  • Christina Popescu,
  • Janet Mengyi Zhao,
  • Kelcie Shatz,
  • LiPing Li,
  • Quinn Carroll,
  • Guofa Liu,
  • Matthew J Paul,
  • Cecilia Flores

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.88261
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Dopamine axons are the only axons known to grow during adolescence. Here, using rodent models, we examined how two proteins, Netrin-1 and its receptor, UNC5C, guide dopamine axons toward the prefrontal cortex and shape behaviour. We demonstrate in mice (Mus musculus) that dopamine axons reach the cortex through a transient gradient of Netrin-1-expressing cells – disrupting this gradient reroutes axons away from their target. Using a seasonal model (Siberian hamsters; Phodopus sungorus) we find that mesocortical dopamine development can be regulated by a natural environmental cue (daylength) in a sexually dimorphic manner – delayed in males, but advanced in females. The timings of dopamine axon growth and UNC5C expression are always phase-locked. Adolescence is an ill-defined, transitional period; we pinpoint neurodevelopmental markers underlying this period.

Keywords