AUTHOR=Ware Michelle , Hamdi-Rozé Houda , Dupé Valérie TITLE=Notch signaling and proneural genes work together to control the neural building blocks for the initial scaffold in the hypothalamus JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neuroanatomy VOLUME=Volume 8 - 2014 YEAR=2014 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroanatomy/articles/10.3389/fnana.2014.00140 DOI=10.3389/fnana.2014.00140 ISSN=1662-5129 ABSTRACT=
The vertebrate embryonic prosencephalon gives rise to the hypothalamus, which plays essential roles in sensory information processing as well as control of physiological homeostasis and behavior. While patterning of the hypothalamus has received much attention, initial neurogenesis in the developing hypothalamus has mostly been neglected. The first differentiating progenitor cells of the hypothalamus will give rise to neurons that form the nucleus of the tract of the postoptic commissure (nTPOC) and the nucleus of the mammillotegmental tract (nMTT). The formation of these neuronal populations has to be highly controlled both spatially and temporally as these tracts will form part of the ventral longitudinal tract (VLT) and act as a scaffold for later, follower axons. This review will cumulate and summarize the existing data available describing initial neurogenesis in the vertebrate hypothalamus. It is well-known that the Notch signaling pathway through the inhibition of proneural genes is a key regulator of neurogenesis in the vertebrate central nervous system. It has only recently been proposed that loss of Notch signaling in the developing chick embryo causes an increase in the number of neurons in the hypothalamus, highlighting an early function of the Notch pathway during hypothalamus formation. Further analysis in the chick and mouse hypothalamus confirms the expression of Notch components and