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Dive into the research topics where Ivo Spiegel is active.

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Featured researches published by Ivo Spiegel.


Neuron | 2005

Gliomedin Mediates Schwann Cell-Axon Interaction and the Molecular Assembly of the Nodes of Ranvier

Yael Eshed; Konstantin Feinberg; Sebastian Poliak; Helena Sabanay; Offra Sarig-Nadir; Ivo Spiegel; John R. Bermingham; Elior Peles

Accumulation of Na(+) channels at the nodes of Ranvier is a prerequisite for saltatory conduction. In peripheral nerves, clustering of these channels along the axolemma is regulated by myelinating Schwann cells through a yet unknown mechanism. We report the identification of gliomedin, a glial ligand for neurofascin and NrCAM, two axonal immunoglobulin cell adhesion molecules that are associated with Na+ channels at the nodes of Ranvier. Gliomedin is expressed by myelinating Schwann cells and accumulates at the edges of each myelin segment during development, where it aligns with the forming nodes. Eliminating the expression of gliomedin by RNAi, or the addition of a soluble extracellular domain of neurofascin to myelinating cultures, which caused the redistribution of gliomedin along the internodes, abolished node formation. Furthermore, a soluble gliomedin induced nodal-like clusters of Na+ channels in the absence of Schwann cells. We propose that gliomedin provides a glial cue for the formation of peripheral nodes of Ranvier.


Nature Neuroscience | 2007

A central role for Necl4 (SynCAM4) in Schwann cell–axon interaction and myelination

Ivo Spiegel; Konstantin Adamsky; Yael Eshed; Ron Milo; Helena Sabanay; Offra Sarig-Nadir; Ido Horresh; Steven S. Scherer; Matthew N. Rasband; Elior Peles

Myelination in the peripheral nervous system requires close contact between Schwann cells and the axon, but the underlying molecular basis remains largely unknown. Here we show that cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) of the nectin-like (Necl, also known as SynCAM or Cadm) family mediate Schwann cell–axon interaction during myelination. Necl4 is the main Necl expressed by myelinating Schwann cells and is located along the internodes in direct apposition to Necl1, which is localized on axons. Necl4 serves as the glial binding partner for axonal Necl1, and the interaction between these two CAMs mediates Schwann cell adhesion. The disruption of the interaction between Necl1 and Necl4 by their soluble extracellular domains, or the expression of a dominant-negative Necl4 in Schwann cells, inhibits myelination. These results suggest that Necl proteins are important for mediating axon-glia contact during myelination in peripheral nerves.


Cell | 2014

Npas4 Regulates Excitatory-Inhibitory Balance within Neural Circuits through Cell-Type-Specific Gene Programs

Ivo Spiegel; Alan R. Mardinly; Harrison W. Gabel; Jeremy E. Bazinet; Cameron H. Couch; Christopher P. Tzeng; David A. Harmin; Michael E. Greenberg

The nervous system adapts to experience by inducing a transcriptional program that controls important aspects of synaptic plasticity. Although the molecular mechanisms of experience-dependent plasticity are well characterized in excitatory neurons, the mechanisms that regulate this process in inhibitory neurons are only poorly understood. Here, we describe a transcriptional program that is induced by neuronal activity in inhibitory neurons. We find that, while neuronal activity induces expression of early-response transcription factors such as Npas4 in both excitatory and inhibitory neurons, Npas4 activates distinct programs of late-response genes in inhibitory and excitatory neurons. These late-response genes differentially regulate synaptic input to these two types of neurons, promoting inhibition onto excitatory neurons while inducing excitation onto inhibitory neurons. These findings suggest that the functional outcomes of activity-induced transcriptional responses are adapted in a cell-type-specific manner to achieve a circuit-wide homeostatic response.


Nature Neuroscience | 2014

Genome-wide identification and characterization of functional neuronal activity-dependent enhancers

Athar N. Malik; Thomas Vierbuchen; Martin Hemberg; Alex A. Rubin; Emi Ling; Cameron H. Couch; Hume Stroud; Ivo Spiegel; Kyle Kai-How Farh; David A. Harmin; Michael E. Greenberg

Experience-dependent gene transcription is required for nervous system development and function. However, the DNA regulatory elements that control this program of gene expression are not well defined. Here we characterize the enhancers that function across the genome to mediate activity-dependent transcription in mouse cortical neurons. We find that the subset of enhancers enriched for monomethylation of histone H3 Lys4 (H3K4me1) and binding of the transcriptional coactivator CREBBP (also called CBP) that shows increased acetylation of histone H3 Lys27 (H3K27ac) after membrane depolarization of cortical neurons functions to regulate activity-dependent transcription. A subset of these enhancers appears to require binding of FOS, which was previously thought to bind primarily to promoters. These findings suggest that FOS functions at enhancers to control activity-dependent gene programs that are critical for nervous system function and provide a resource of functional cis-regulatory elements that may give insight into the genetic variants that contribute to brain development and disease.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2002

Caspr3 and Caspr4, Two Novel Members of the Caspr Family Are Expressed in the Nervous System and Interact with PDZ Domains

Ivo Spiegel; Daniela Salomon; Beat Erne; Nicole Schaeren-Wiemers; Elior Peles

The NCP family of cell-recognition molecules represents a distinct subgroup of the neurexins that includes Caspr and Caspr2, as well as Drosophila Neurexin-IV and axotactin. Here, we report the identification of Caspr3 and Caspr4, two new NCPs expressed in nervous system. Caspr3 was detected along axons in the corpus callosum, spinal cord, basket cells in the cerebellum and in peripheral nerves, as well as in oligodendrocytes. In contrast, expression of Caspr4 was more restricted to specific neuronal subpopulations in the olfactory bulb, hippocampus, deep cerebellar nuclei, and the substantia nigra. Similar to the neurexins, the cytoplasmic tails of Caspr3 and Caspr4 interacted differentially with PDZ domain-containing proteins of the CASK/Lin2-Veli/Lin7-Mint1/Lin10 complex. The structural organization and distinct cellular distribution of Caspr3 and Caspr4 suggest a potential role of these proteins in cell recognition within the nervous system.


Nature | 2016

Sensory experience regulates cortical inhibition by inducing IGF1 in VIP neurons

Alan R. Mardinly; Ivo Spiegel; Annarita Patrizi; Eleonora Centofante; J. E. Bazinet; Christopher P. Tzeng; Caleigh Mandel-Brehm; David A. Harmin; Hillel Adesnik; Michela Fagiolini; Michael E. Greenberg

Inhibitory neurons regulate the adaptation of neural circuits to sensory experience, but the molecular mechanisms by which experience controls the connectivity between different types of inhibitory neuron to regulate cortical plasticity are largely unknown. Here we show that exposure of dark-housed mice to light induces a gene program in cortical vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)-expressing neurons that is markedly distinct from that induced in excitatory neurons and other subtypes of inhibitory neuron. We identify Igf1 as one of several activity-regulated genes that are specific to VIP neurons, and demonstrate that IGF1 functions cell-autonomously in VIP neurons to increase inhibitory synaptic input onto these neurons. Our findings further suggest that in cortical VIP neurons, experience-dependent gene transcription regulates visual acuity by activating the expression of IGF1, thus promoting the inhibition of disinhibitory neurons and affecting inhibition onto cortical pyramidal neurons.


Molecular Membrane Biology | 2002

Cellular junctions of myelinated nerves (Review)

Ivo Spiegel; Elior Peles

Myelinated nerves are specifically designed to allow the efficient and rapid propagation of action potentials. Myelinating glial cells contain several types of cellular junctions that are found between the myelin lamellas themselves in specialized regions of non-compact myelin and between the myelin membrane and the underlying axon. These include most of the junctional specializations found in epithelial cells, including tight, gap and adherens junctions. However, whereas in epithelial cells these junctions are formed between different cells, in myelinating glia these so called autotypic junctions are found between membrane lamellae of the same cell. In addition, myelinating glial cells form a heterotypic septate-like junction with the axon around the nodes of Ranvier and, in the peripheral nerve system, contact the basal lamina, which surrounds myelinating Schwann cells. This short review discusses the structure, molecular composition and function of the junctions present in myelinating cells, concentrating on the axo-glial junction.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2012

The cytoskeletal adapter protein 4.1G organizes the internodes in peripheral myelinated nerves

Aleksandra Ivanovic; Ido Horresh; Neev Golan; Ivo Spiegel; Helena Sabanay; Shahar Frechter; Shinichi Ohno; Nobuo Terada; Wiebke Möbius; Jack Rosenbluth; Nils Brose; Elior Peles

Deletion of the Schwann cell cytoskeletal adapter protein 4.1G led to aberrant distribution of glial adhesion molecules and axonal proteins along the internodes.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Genetic deletion of Cadm4 results in myelin abnormalities resembling Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy.

Neev Golan; Elena Kartvelishvily; Ivo Spiegel; Daniela Salomon; Helena Sabanay; Katya Rechav; Anya Vainshtein; Shahar Frechter; Galia Maik-Rachline; Yael Eshed-Eisenbach; Takashi Momoi; Elior Peles

The interaction between myelinating Schwann cells and the axons they ensheath is mediated by cell adhesion molecules of the Cadm/Necl/SynCAM family. This family consists of four members: Cadm4/Necl4 and Cadm1/Necl2 are found in both glia and axons, whereas Cadm2/Necl3 and Cadm3/Necl1 are expressed by sensory and motor neurons. By generating mice lacking each of the Cadm genes, we now demonstrate that Cadm4 plays a role in the establishment of the myelin unit in the peripheral nervous system. Mice lacking Cadm4 (PGK-Cre/Cadm4fl/fl), but not Cadm1, Cadm2, or Cadm3, develop focal hypermyelination characterized by tomacula and myelin outfoldings, which are the hallmark of several Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathies. The absence of Cadm4 also resulted in abnormal axon–glial contact and redistribution of ion channels along the axon. These neuropathological features were also found in transgenic mice expressing a dominant-negative mutant of Cadm4 lacking its cytoplasmic domain in myelinating glia Tg(mbp-Cadm4dCT), as well as in mice lacking Cadm4 specifically in Schwann cells (DHH-Cre/Cadm4fl/fl). Consistent with these abnormalities, both PGK-Cre/Cadm4fl/fl and Tg(mbp-Cadm4dCT) mice exhibit impaired motor function and slower nerve conduction velocity. These findings indicate that Cadm4 regulates the growth of the myelin unit and the organization of the underlying axonal membrane.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2009

The cell adhesion nectin‐like molecules (Necl) 1 and 4 suppress the growth and tumorigenic ability of colon cancer cells

Shani Raveh; Nancy Gavert; Ivo Spiegel; Avri Ben-Ze'ev

A key step in human colon cancer development includes the hyperactivation of Wnt/β‐catenin signaling and the induction of β‐catenin‐TCF target genes that participate in colon cancer progression. Recent studies identified members of the immunoglobulin‐like cell adhesion molecules (IgCAM) of the L1CAM family (L1 and Nr‐CAM) as targets of β‐catenin‐TCF signaling in colon cancer cells. L1 was detected at the invasive front of colon cancer tissue and confers metastasis when overexpressed in cells. In contrast to L1, we did not detect in colon cancer cells significant levels of another IgCAM family of molecules, the nectin‐like (Necl) receptors Necl1 and Necl4, while Necl4 was previously found in the normal small intestine and colon tissues. We studied the properties of colon cancer cells in which Necl4 and Necl1 were expressed either alone, or in combination, and found that such cells display a wide range of properties associated with tumor suppression. Expression of both Necl1 and Necl4 was the most efficient in suppressing the tumorigenicity of colon cancer cells. This was associated with enhanced rates of apoptosis and change in several apoptosis‐related markers. In contrast to its capacity to suppress tumorigenesis, Necl4 was unable to affect the highly malignant and metastatic capacities of colon cancer cells in which L1 was overexpressed. Our results suggest that various IgCAM receptor families play different roles in affecting the tumorigenic function of the same cells, and that Necl1 and Necl4 can fulfill a tumor suppressive role. J. Cell. Biochem. 108: 326–336, 2009.

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Elior Peles

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Helena Sabanay

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Konstantin Adamsky

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Neev Golan

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yael Eshed

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Daniela Salomon

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Elena Kartvelishvily

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Ido Horresh

Weizmann Institute of Science

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