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Dive into the research topics where José Manuel García-Verdugo is active.

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Featured researches published by José Manuel García-Verdugo.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2001

A unified hypothesis on the lineage of neural stem cells.

Arturo Alvarez-Buylla; José Manuel García-Verdugo; Anthony D. Tramontin

For many years, it was assumed that neurons and glia in the central nervous system were produced from two distinct precursor pools that diverged early during embryonic development. This theory was partially based on the idea that neurogenesis and gliogenesis occurred during different periods of development, and that neurogenesis ceased perinatally. However, there is now abundant evidence that neural stem cells persist in the adult brain and support ongoing neurogenesis in restricted regions of the central nervous system. Surprisingly, these stem cells have the characteristics of fully differentiated glia. Neuroepithelial stem cells in the embryonic neural tube do not show glial characteristics, raising questions about the putative lineage from embryonic to adult stem cells. In the developing brain, radial glia have long been known to produce cortical astrocytes, but recent data indicate that radial glia might also divide asymmetrically to produce cortical neurons. Here we review these new developments and propose that the stem cells in the central nervous system are contained within the neuroepithelial → radial glia → astrocyte lineage.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Origin of Oligodendrocytes in the Subventricular Zone of the Adult Brain

Bénédicte Menn; José Manuel García-Verdugo; Cynthia Yaschine; Oscar Gonzalez-Perez; David H. Rowitch; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla

Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-positive astrocytes (type B cells) in the subventricular zone (SVZ) generate large numbers of new neurons in the adult brain. SVZ stem cells can also generate oligodendrocytes in vitro, but it is not known whether these adult primary progenitors generate oligodendrocytes in vivo. Myelin repair and oligodendrocyte formation in the adult brain is instead associated with glial-restricted progenitors cells, known as oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs). Here we show that type B cells also generate a small number of nonmyelinating NG2-positive OPCs and mature myelinating oligodendrocytes. Some type B cells and a small subpopulation of actively dividing type C (transit-amplifying) cells expressed oligodendrocyte lineage transcription factor 2 (Olig2), suggesting that oligodendrocyte differentiation in the SVZ begins early in the lineage. Olig2-positive, polysialylated neural cell adhesion molecule-positive, PDGF receptor α-positive, and β-tubulin-negative cells originating in the SVZ migrated into corpus callosum, striatum, and fimbria fornix to differentiate into the NG2-positive nonmyelinating and mature myelinating oligodendrocytes. Furthermore, primary clonal cultures of type B cells gave rise to oligodendrocytes alone or oligodendrocytes and neurons. Importantly, the number of oligodendrocytes derived from type B cells in vivo increased fourfold after a demyelinating lesion in corpus callosum, indicating that SVZ astrocytes participate in myelin repair in the adult brain. Our work identifies SVZ type B cells as progenitors of oligodendrocytes in normal and injured adult brain.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2004

Cell types, lineage, and architecture of the germinal zone in the adult dentate gyrus.

Bettina Seri; José Manuel García-Verdugo; Lucía Collado-Morente; Bruce S. McEwen; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla

New neurons continue to be born in the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the dentate gyrus in the hippocampus of adult mammals, including humans. Previous work has shown that astrocytes function as the progenitors of these new neurons through immature intermediate D cells. In the first part of the present study, we determined the structure of each of these progenitors and how they are organized in three dimensions. Serial‐section reconstructions of the SGZ, using confocal and electron microscopy demonstrate that SGZ astrocytes form baskets that hold clusters of D cells, largely insulating them from the hilus. Two types of glial fibrillary acidic protein–expressing astrocytes (radial and horizontal) and three classes of doublecortin and PSA‐NCAM–positive D cells (D1, D2, D3) were observed. Radial astrocytes appear to interact closely with clusters of D cells forming radial proliferative units. In the second part of this study, we show that retrovirally labeled radial astrocytes give rise to granule neurons. We also used bromodeoxyuridine and [3H]thymidine labeling to study the sequence of appearance of the different D cells after a 7‐day treatment with anti‐mitotics. This analysis, together with retroviral labeling data, suggest that radial astrocytes divide to generate D1 cells, which in turn divide once to form postmitotic D2 cells. D2 cells mature through a D3 stage to form new granule neurons. These observations provide a model of how the germinal zone of the adult hippocampus is organized and suggest a sequence of cellular stages in the generation of new granule neurons. J. Comp. Neurol. 478:359–378, 2004.


Nature | 2009

Chromatin remodelling factor Mll1 is essential for neurogenesis from postnatal neural stem cells

Daniel A. Lim; Yin-Cheng Huang; Tomek Swigut; Anika L. Mirick; José Manuel García-Verdugo; Joanna Wysocka; Patricia Ernst; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla

Epigenetic mechanisms that maintain neurogenesis throughout adult life remain poorly understood. Trithorax group (trxG) and Polycomb group (PcG) gene products are part of an evolutionarily conserved chromatin remodelling system that activate or silence gene expression, respectively. Although PcG member Bmi1 has been shown to be required for postnatal neural stem cell self-renewal, the role of trxG genes remains unknown. Here we show that the trxG member Mll1 (mixed-lineage leukaemia 1) is required for neurogenesis in the mouse postnatal brain. Mll1-deficient subventricular zone neural stem cells survive, proliferate and efficiently differentiate into glial lineages; however, neuronal differentiation is severely impaired. In Mll1-deficient cells, early proneural Mash1 (also known as Ascl1) and gliogenic Olig2 expression are preserved, but Dlx2, a key downstream regulator of subventricular zone neurogenesis, is not expressed. Overexpression of Dlx2 can rescue neurogenesis in Mll1-deficient cells. Chromatin immunoprecipitation demonstrates that Dlx2 is a direct target of MLL in subventricular zone cells. In differentiating wild-type subventricular zone cells, Mash1, Olig2 and Dlx2 loci have high levels of histone 3 trimethylated at lysine 4 (H3K4me3), consistent with their transcription. In contrast, in Mll1-deficient subventricular zone cells, chromatin at Dlx2 is bivalently marked by both H3K4me3 and histone 3 trimethylated at lysine 27 (H3K27me3), and the Dlx2 gene fails to properly activate. These data support a model in which Mll1 is required to resolve key silenced bivalent loci in postnatal neural precursors to the actively transcribed state for the induction of neurogenesis, but not for gliogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Reduction of seizures by transplantation of cortical GABAergic interneuron precursors into Kv1.1 mutant mice

Scott C. Baraban; Derek G. Southwell; Rosanne C. Estrada; Daniel L. Jones; Joy Y. Sebe; Clara Alfaro-Cervello; José Manuel García-Verdugo; John L.R. Rubenstein; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla

Epilepsy, a disease characterized by abnormal brain activity, is a disabling and potentially life-threatening condition for nearly 1% of the world population. Unfortunately, modulation of brain excitability using available antiepileptic drugs can have serious side effects, especially in the developing brain, and some patients can only be improved by surgical removal of brain regions containing the seizure focus. Here, we show that bilateral transplantation of precursor cells from the embryonic medial ganglionic eminence (MGE) into early postnatal neocortex generates mature GABAergic interneurons in the host brain. In mice receiving MGE cell grafts, GABA-mediated synaptic and extrasynaptic inhibition onto host brain pyramidal neurons is significantly increased. Bilateral MGE cell grafts in epileptic mice lacking a Shaker-like potassium channel (a gene mutated in one form of human epilepsy) resulted in significant reductions in the duration and frequency of spontaneous electrographic seizures. Our findings suggest that MGE-derived interneurons could be used to ameliorate abnormal excitability and possibly act as an effective strategy in the treatment of epilepsy.


Nature | 2012

Intrinsically determined cell death of developing cortical interneurons

Derek G. Southwell; Mercedes F. Paredes; Rui Pedro Galvão; Daniel L. Jones; Robert C. Froemke; Joy Y. Sebe; Clara Alfaro-Cervello; Yunshuo Tang; José Manuel García-Verdugo; John L.R. Rubenstein; Scott C. Baraban; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla

Cortical inhibitory circuits are formed by γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-secreting interneurons, a cell population that originates far from the cerebral cortex in the embryonic ventral forebrain. Given their distant developmental origins, it is intriguing how the number of cortical interneurons is ultimately determined. One possibility, suggested by the neurotrophic hypothesis, is that cortical interneurons are overproduced, and then after their migration into cortex the excess interneurons are eliminated through a competition for extrinsically derived trophic signals. Here we characterize the developmental cell death of mouse cortical interneurons in vivo, in vitro and after transplantation. We found that 40% of developing cortical interneurons were eliminated through Bax (Bcl-2-associated X)-dependent apoptosis during postnatal life. When cultured in vitro or transplanted into the cortex, interneuron precursors died at a cellular age similar to that at which endogenous interneurons died during normal development. Over transplant sizes that varied 200-fold, a constant fraction of the transplanted population underwent cell death. The death of transplanted neurons was not affected by the cell-autonomous disruption of TrkB (tropomyosin kinase receptor B), the main neurotrophin receptor expressed by neurons of the central nervous system. Transplantation expanded the cortical interneuron population by up to 35%, but the frequency of inhibitory synaptic events did not scale with the number of transplanted interneurons. Taken together, our findings indicate that interneuron cell death is determined intrinsically, either cell-autonomously or through a population-autonomous competition for survival signals derived from other interneurons.


JCI insight | 2018

Imbalance of immunological synapse-kinapse states reflects tumor escape to immunity in glioblastoma

Laura R. Díaz; Elena Saavedra-López; Leire Romarate; Izaskun Mitxitorena; Paola V. Casanova; George P. Cribaro; José María Gallego; Ana Perez-Vallés; Jerónimo Forteza-Vila; Clara Alfaro-Cervello; José Manuel García-Verdugo; Carlos Barcia

Since the proper activation of T cells requires the physical interaction with target cells through the formation of immunological synapses (IS), an alteration at this level could be a reason why tumors escape the immune response. As part of their life cycle, it is thought that T cells alternate between a static phase, the IS, and a dynamic phase, the immunological kinapse (IK), depending on high or low antigen sensing. Our investigation performed in tissue samples of human glioma shows that T cells are able to establish synapsing interactions not only with glioma tumorigenic cells, but also with stromal myeloid cells. Particularly, the IS displaying a T cell receptor-rich (TCR-rich) central supramolecular activation cluster (cSMAC) is preferentially established with stromal cells, as opposed to malignant cells. Conversely, T cells in the malignant areas showed distinct morphometric parameters compared with nonneoplastic tissue - the former characterized by an elongated shape, well-suited to kinaptic dynamics. Importantly, high-resolution 3-dimensional analyses demonstrated the existence of bona-fide IK preferentially arranged in malignant areas of the tumor. This imbalance of IS/IK states between these 2 microenvironments reveals the low antigenic sensing of T cells when patrolling tumorigenic cells and reflects the immunoevasive environment of the tumor.


Archive | 2011

Epithelial Organization of Adult Neurogenic Germinal Niches

Zaman Mirzadeh; Young-Goo Han; José Manuel García-Verdugo; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla

The adult mammalian brain is perhaps the most complex biological system under scientific study. Yet for all of its complexity, the brain develops from a simple epithelium. Throughout development, most neurons and macroglia are derived from embryonic neural stem cells that remain part of this neuroepithelium lining the brain ventricles. However, it is thought that neural stem cells in the adult brain, which are displaced to the subventricular zone of the lateral ventricle and the subgranular zone of the hippocampus, may have lost their epithelial properties. This chapter explores the epithelial organization of cells lining the ventricles in the adult rodent brain and reveals that a mixed neuroepithelium persists in the adult that contains neural stem cells in addition to differentiated, non-dividing ependymal cells.


Cerebral Cortex | 2006

Composition and Organization of the SCZ: A Large Germinal Layer Containing Neural Stem Cells in the Adult Mammalian Brain

Bettina Seri; Daniel G. Herrera; Angela Gritti; S. Ferron; L. Collado; Angelo L. Vescovi; José Manuel García-Verdugo; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla


Archive | 2009

Therapeutic Potential of Neural Stem Cells

Sara Gil-Perotin; José Manuel García-Verdugo; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla

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Bettina Seri

University of California

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Daniel L. Jones

California Institute of Technology

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Joy Y. Sebe

University of California

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