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Retinal neurons establish mosaic patterning by excluding homotypic somata from their dendritic territory.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Kozlowski, C; Hadyniak, SE; Kay, JN
Published in: bioRxiv
November 18, 2023

In vertebrate retina, individual neurons of the same type are distributed regularly across the tissue in a pattern known as a mosaic. Establishment of mosaics during development requires cell-cell repulsion among homotypic neurons, but the mechanisms underlying this repulsion remain unknown. Here we show that two mouse retinal cell types, OFF and ON starburst amacrine cells, establish mosaic spacing by using their dendritic arbors to repel neighboring homotypic somata. Using newly-generated transgenic tools and single cell labeling, we identify a transient developmental period when starburst somata receive extensive contacts from neighboring starburst dendrites; these serve to exclude somata from settling within the neighbor's dendritic territory. Dendrite-soma exclusion is mediated by MEGF10, a cell-surface molecule required for starburst mosaic patterning. Our results implicate dendrite-soma exclusion as a key mechanism underlying starburst mosaic spacing, and suggest that this could be a general mechanism for mosaic patterning across many cell types and species.

Duke Scholars

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

November 18, 2023

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
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ICMJE
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Kozlowski, C., Hadyniak, S. E., & Kay, J. N. (2023). Retinal neurons establish mosaic patterning by excluding homotypic somata from their dendritic territory. BioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.11.17.567616
Kozlowski, Christopher, Sarah E. Hadyniak, and Jeremy N. Kay. “Retinal neurons establish mosaic patterning by excluding homotypic somata from their dendritic territory.BioRxiv, November 18, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.11.17.567616.
Kozlowski, Christopher, et al. “Retinal neurons establish mosaic patterning by excluding homotypic somata from their dendritic territory.BioRxiv, Nov. 2023. Pubmed, doi:10.1101/2023.11.17.567616.

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

November 18, 2023

Location

United States