Authors
Maria E Gómez-Casati, Joshua C Murtie, Carlos Rio, Konstantina Stankovic, M Charles Liberman, Gabriel Corfas
Publication date
2010/9/28
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
107
Issue
39
Pages
17005-17010
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Recent studies indicate that molecules released by glia can induce synapse formation. However, what induces glia to produce such signals, their identity, and their in vivo relevance remain poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that supporting cells of the vestibular organ—cells that have many characteristics of glia—promote synapse formation only when induced by neuron-derived signals. Furthermore, we identify BDNF as the synaptogenic signal produced by these nonneuronal cells. Mice in which erbB signaling has been eliminated in supporting cells have vestibular dysfunction caused by failure of synapse formation between hair cells and sensory neurons. This phenotype correlates with reduced BDNF expression in supporting cells and is rescued by reexpression of BDNF in these cells. Furthermore, knockdown of BDNF expression in supporting cells postnatally phenocopies the loss of erbB signaling …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ME Gómez-Casati, JC Murtie, C Rio, K Stankovic… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010