Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2039830 | Cell Reports | 2016 | 9 Pages |
•Mitochondria in cortical interneurons are motile during migration•Mitochondria are stationary in migrating cortical projection neurons•Oxidative phosphorylation defects disrupt cortical interneuron migration•Interneurons lose polarity when oxidative phosphorylation is perturbed
SummaryMitochondrial dysfunction has been increasingly linked to neurodevelopmental disorders such as intellectual disability, childhood epilepsy, and autism spectrum disorder, conditions also associated with cortical GABAergic interneuron dysfunction. Although interneurons have some of the highest metabolic demands in the postnatal brain, the importance of mitochondria during interneuron development is unknown. We find that interneuron migration from the basal forebrain to the neocortex is highly sensitive to perturbations in oxidative phosphorylation. Both pharmacologic and genetic inhibition of adenine nucleotide transferase 1 (Ant1) disrupts the non-radial migration of interneurons, but not the radial migration of cortical projection neurons. The selective dependence of cortical interneuron migration on oxidative phosphorylation may be a mechanistic pathway upon which multiple developmental and metabolic pathologies converge.
Graphical AbstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slide