Cell Stem Cell
Volume 11, Issue 4, 5 October 2012, Pages 505-516
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Article
Asymmetric Segregation of the Double-Stranded RNA Binding Protein Staufen2 during Mammalian Neural Stem Cell Divisions Promotes Lineage Progression

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Summary

Asymmetric cell divisions are a fundamental feature of neural development, and misregulation can lead to brain abnormalities or tumor formation. During an asymmetric cell division, molecular determinants are segregated preferentially into one daughter cell to specify its fate. An important goal is to identify the asymmetric determinants in neural progenitor cells, which could be tumor suppressors or inducers of specific neural fates. Here, we show that the double-stranded RNA-binding protein Stau2 is distributed asymmetrically during progenitor divisions in the developing mouse cortex, preferentially segregating into the Tbr2+ neuroblast daughter, taking with it a subset of RNAs. Knockdown of Stau2 stimulates differentiation and overexpression produces periventricular neuronal masses, demonstrating its functional importance for normal cortical development. We immunoprecipitated Stau2 to examine its cargo mRNAs, and found enrichment for known asymmetric and basal cell determinants, such as Trim32, and identified candidates, including a subset involved in primary cilium function.

Highlights

► The RNA binding protein Stau2 is asymmetrically distributed in neural progenitors ► Perturbation of Stau2 levels causes abnormal CNS progenitor behavior ► Stau2-associated transcripts include known and potentially novel fate determinants ► Asymmetric segregation of RNA networks via Stau2 contributes to cell diversification

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Present address: Department for Anatomy and Cell Biology, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Schillerstrasse 42, 80336 Munich, Germany