The homeodomain protein Vax1 is required for axon guidance and major tract formation in the developing forebrain

  1. Stefano Bertuzzi,
  2. Robert Hindges,
  3. Stina H. Mui,
  4. Dennis D.M. O'Leary, and
  5. Greg Lemke
  1. Molecular Neurobiology Laboratory, The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, California 92037 USA; Department of Neurosciences, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093 USA

Abstract

The homeodomain protein Vax1 is expressed in a highly circumscribed set of cells at the ventral anterior midline of the embryonic CNS. These cells populate the choroid fissure of the optic disk, the body of the optic stalk and nerve, the optic chiasm and ventral diencephalon, and the anterior midline zones that abut developing commissural tracts. We have generated mutant mice that lack Vax1. In these mice (1) the optic disks fail to close, leading to coloboma and loss of the eye-nerve boundary; (2) optic nerve glia fail to associate with and appear to repulse ingrowing retinal axons, resulting in a fascicle of axons that are completely segregated from optic nerve astrocytes; (3) retinal axons fail to penetrate the brain in significant numbers and fail to form an optic chiasm; and (4) axons in multiple commissural tracts of the anterior CNS, including the corpus callosum and the hippocampal and anterior commissures, fail to cross the midline. These axon guidance defects do not result from the death of normally Vax1+midline cells but, instead, correlate with markedly diminished expression of attractive guidance cues in these cells. Vax1 therefore regulates the guidance properties of a set of anterior midline cells that orchestrate axon trajectories in the developing mammalian forebrain.

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Footnotes

  • Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL lemke{at}salk.edu; FAX (858) 455-6138.

    • Received May 27, 1999.
    • Accepted October 14, 1999.
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