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Dive into the research topics where Navneet A. Vasistha is active.

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Featured researches published by Navneet A. Vasistha.


Cerebral Cortex | 2012

Compartmentalization of Cerebral Cortical Germinal Zones in a Lissencephalic Primate and Gyrencephalic Rodent

Fernando García-Moreno; Navneet A. Vasistha; Nonata Trevia; James A. Bourne; Zoltán Molnár

Previous studies of macaque and human cortices identified cytoarchitectonically distinct germinal zones; the ventricular zone inner subventricular zone (ISVZ), and outer subventricular zone (OSVZ). To date, the OSVZ has only been described in gyrencephalic brains, separated from the ISVZ by an inner fiber layer and considered a milestone that triggered increased neocortical neurogenesis. However, this observation has only been assessed in a handful of species without the identification of the different progenitor populations. We examined the Amazonian rodent agouti (Dasyprocta agouti) and the marmoset monkey (Callithrix jacchus) to further understand relationships among progenitor compartmentalization, proportions of various cortical progenitors, and degree of cortical folding. We identified a similar cytoarchitectonic distinction between the OSVZ and ISVZ at midgestation in both species. In the marmoset, we quantified the ventricular and abventricular divisions and observed similar proportions as previously described for the human and ferret brains. The proportions of radial glia, intermediate progenitors, and outer radial glial cell (oRG) populations were similar in midgestation lissencephalic marmoset as in gyrencephalic human or ferret. Our findings suggest that cytoarchitectonic subdivisions of SVZ are an evolutionary trend and not a primate specific feature, and a large population of oRG can be seen regardless of cortical folding.


Cerebral Cortex | 2015

Cortical and Clonal Contribution of Tbr2 Expressing Progenitors in the Developing Mouse Brain

Navneet A. Vasistha; Fernando García-Moreno; Siddharth Arora; Amanda F.P. Cheung; Sebastian J. Arnold; Elizabeth J. Robertson; Zoltán Molnár

The individual contribution of different progenitor subtypes towards the mature rodent cerebral cortex is not fully understood. Intermediate progenitor cells (IPCs) are key to understanding the regulation of neuronal number during cortical development and evolution, yet their exact contribution is much debated. Intermediate progenitors in the cortical subventricular zone are defined by expression of T-box brain-2 (Tbr2). In this study we demonstrate by using the Tbr2Cre mouse line and state-of-the-art cell lineage labeling techniques, that IPC derived cells contribute substantial proportions 67.5% of glutamatergic but not GABAergic or astrocytic cells to all cortical layers including the earliest generated subplate zone. We also describe the laminar dispersion of clonally derived cells from IPCs using a recently described clonal analysis tool (CLoNe) and show that pair-generated cells in different layers cluster closer (142.1 ± 76.8 μm) than unrelated cells (294.9 ± 105.4 μm). The clonal dispersion from individual Tbr2 positive intermediate progenitors contributes to increasing the cortical surface. Our study also describes extracortical contributions from Tbr2+ progenitors to the lateral olfactory tract and ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2016

From sauropsids to mammals and back: New approaches to comparative cortical development

Navneet A. Vasistha; Fernando García-Moreno; Zoltán Molnár

Evolution of the mammalian neocortex (isocortex) has been a persisting problem in neurobiology. While recent studies have attempted to understand the evolutionary expansion of the human neocortex from rodents, similar approaches have been used to study the changes between reptiles, birds, and mammals. We review here findings from the past decades on the development, organization, and gene expression patterns in various extant species. This review aims to compare cortical cell numbers and neuronal cell types to the elaboration of progenitor populations and their proliferation in these species. Several progenitors, such as the ventricular radial glia, the subventricular intermediate progenitors, and the subventricular (outer) radial glia, have been identified but the contribution of each to cortical layers and cell types through specific lineages, their possible roles in determining brain size or cortical folding, are not yet understood. Across species, larger, more diverse progenitors relate to cortical size and cell diversity. The challenge is to relate the radial and tangential expansion of the neocortex to the changes in the proliferative compartments during mammalian evolution and with the changes in gene expression and lineages evident in various sectors of the developing brain. We also review the use of recent lineage tracing and transcriptomic approaches to revisit theories and to provide novel understanding of molecular processes involved in specification of cortical regions. J. Comp. Neurol. 524:630–645, 2016.


Development | 2014

CLoNe is a new method to target single progenitors and study their progeny in mouse and chick

Fernando García-Moreno; Navneet A. Vasistha; Jo Begbie; Zoltán Molnár

Cell lineage analysis enables us to address pivotal questions relating to: the embryonic origin of cells and sibling cell relationships in the adult body; the contribution of progenitors activated after trauma or disease; and the comparison across species in evolutionary biology. To address such fundamental questions, several techniques for clonal labelling have been developed, each with its shortcomings. Here, we report a novel method, CLoNe that is designed to work in all vertebrate species and tissues. CLoNe uses a cocktail of labelling, targeting and transposition vectors that enables targeting of specific subpopulations of progenitor types with a combination of fluorophores resulting in multifluorescence that describes multiple clones per specimen. Furthermore, transposition into the genome ensures the longevity of cell labelling. We demonstrate the robustness of this technique in mouse and chick forebrain development, and show evidence that CLoNe will be broadly applicable to study clonal relationships in different tissues and species.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2015

From sauropsids to mammals and back

Navneet A. Vasistha; Fernando García-Moreno; Zoltán Molnár

Evolution of the mammalian neocortex (isocortex) has been a persisting problem in neurobiology. While recent studies have attempted to understand the evolutionary expansion of the human neocortex from rodents, similar approaches have been used to study the changes between reptiles, birds, and mammals. We review here findings from the past decades on the development, organization, and gene expression patterns in various extant species. This review aims to compare cortical cell numbers and neuronal cell types to the elaboration of progenitor populations and their proliferation in these species. Several progenitors, such as the ventricular radial glia, the subventricular intermediate progenitors, and the subventricular (outer) radial glia, have been identified but the contribution of each to cortical layers and cell types through specific lineages, their possible roles in determining brain size or cortical folding, are not yet understood. Across species, larger, more diverse progenitors relate to cortical size and cell diversity. The challenge is to relate the radial and tangential expansion of the neocortex to the changes in the proliferative compartments during mammalian evolution and with the changes in gene expression and lineages evident in various sectors of the developing brain. We also review the use of recent lineage tracing and transcriptomic approaches to revisit theories and to provide novel understanding of molecular processes involved in specification of cortical regions. J. Comp. Neurol. 524:630–645, 2016.


Neural Development | 2013

Dicer is required for neural stem cell multipotency and lineage progression during cerebral cortex development

Nathalie Saurat; Therése Andersson; Navneet A. Vasistha; Zoltán Molnár; Frederick J. Livesey

BackgroundDuring cerebral cortex development, multipotent neural progenitor cells generate a variety of neuronal subtypes in a fixed temporal order. How a single neural progenitor cell generates the diversity of cortical projection neurons in a temporal sequence is not well understood. Based on their function in developmental timing in other systems, Dicer and microRNAs are potential candidate regulators of cellular pathways that control lineage progression in neural systems.ResultsCortex-specific deletion of Dicer results in a marked reduction in the cellular complexity of the cortex, due to a pronounced narrowing in the range of neuronal types generated by Dicer-null cortical stem and progenitor cells. Instead of generating different classes of lamina-specific neurons in order over the 6-day period of neurogenesis, Dicer null cortical stem and progenitor cells continually produce one class of deep layer projection neuron. However, gliogenesis in the Dicer-null cerebral cortex was not delayed, despite the loss of multipotency and the failure of neuronal lineage progression.ConclusionsWe conclude that Dicer is required for regulating cortical stem cell multipotency with respect to neuronal diversity, without affecting the larger scale switch from neurogenesis to gliogenesis. The differences in phenotypes reported from different timings of Dicer deletion indicate that the molecular pathways regulating developmental transitions are notably dosage sensitive.


Stem Cells | 2016

Maturation and electrophysiological properties of human pluripotent stem cell‐derived oligodendrocytes

Matthew R. Livesey; Dario Magnani; Elaine M. Cleary; Navneet A. Vasistha; Owain T. James; Bhuvaneish T. Selvaraj; Karen Burr; David Story; Christopher Shaw; Peter C. Kind; Giles E. Hardingham; David J. A. Wyllie; Siddharthan Chandran

Rodent‐based studies have shown that the membrane properties of oligodendrocytes play prominent roles in their physiology and shift markedly during their maturation from the oligodendrocyte precursor cell (OPC) stage. However, the conservation of these properties and maturation processes in human oligodendrocytes remains unknown, despite their dysfunction being implicated in human neurodegenerative diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Here, we have defined the membrane properties of human oligodendrocytes derived from pluripotent stem cells as they mature from the OPC stage, and have identified strong conservation of maturation‐specific physiological characteristics reported in rodent systems. We find that as human oligodendrocytes develop and express maturation markers, they exhibit a progressive decrease in voltage‐gated sodium and potassium channels and a loss of tetrodotoxin‐sensitive spiking activity. Concomitant with this is an increase in inwardly rectifying potassium channel activity, as well as a characteristic switch in AMPA receptor composition. All these steps mirror the developmental trajectory observed in rodent systems. Oligodendrocytes derived from mutant C9ORF72‐carryng ALS patient induced pluripotent stem cells did not exhibit impairment to maturation and maintain viability with respect to control lines despite the presence of RNA foci, suggesting that maturation defects may not be a primary feature of this mutation. Thus, we have established that the development of human oligodendroglia membrane properties closely resemble those found in rodent cells and have generated a platform to enable the impact of human neurodegenerative disease‐causing mutations on oligodendrocyte maturation to be studied. Stem Cells 2016;34:1040–1053


Nature Neuroscience | 2011

Hanging by the tail: progenitor populations proliferate.

Zoltán Molnár; Navneet A. Vasistha; Fernando García-Moreno

A study now identifies a new progenitor subtype in the developing mouse cortex, similar to the outer radial glia progenitors described previously in human, ferret and other mammals with larger, folded brains.


Nature Communications | 2018

C9ORF72 repeat expansion causes vulnerability of motor neurons to Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity

Bhuvaneish T. Selvaraj; Matthew R. Livesey; Chen Zhao; Jenna M. Gregory; Owain T. James; Elaine M. Cleary; Amit K. Chouhan; Angus Gane; Emma M. Perkins; Owen Dando; Simon G. Lillico; Youn Bok Lee; Agnes L. Nishimura; Urjana Poreci; Sai Thankamony; Meryll Pray; Navneet A. Vasistha; Dario Magnani; Shyamanga Borooah; Karen Burr; David Story; Alexander McCampbell; Christopher Shaw; Peter C. Kind; Timothy J. Aitman; C. Bruce A. Whitelaw; Ian Wilmut; Colin Smith; Gareth B. Miles; Giles E. Hardingham

Mutations in C9ORF72 are the most common cause of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Here, through a combination of RNA-Seq and electrophysiological studies on induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived motor neurons (MNs), we show that increased expression of GluA1 AMPA receptor (AMPAR) subunit occurs in MNs with C9ORF72 mutations that leads to increased Ca2+-permeable AMPAR expression and results in enhanced selective MN vulnerability to excitotoxicity. These deficits are not found in iPSC-derived cortical neurons and are abolished by CRISPR/Cas9-mediated correction of the C9ORF72 repeat expansion in MNs. We also demonstrate that MN-specific dysregulation of AMPAR expression is also present in C9ORF72 patient post-mortem material. We therefore present multiple lines of evidence for the specific upregulation of GluA1 subunits in human mutant C9ORF72 MNs that could lead to a potential pathogenic excitotoxic mechanism in ALS.Repeat expansion mutation in C9ORF72 is the most common cause of familial ALS. Here, the authors generate motor neurons from cells of patients with C9ORF72 mutations, and characterize changes in gene expression in these motor neurons compared to genetically corrected lines, which suggest that glutamate receptor subunit GluA1 is dysregulated in this form of ALS.


International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience | 2012

Compartmentalisation of cerebral cortical germinal zones in a lissencephalic primate and gyrencephalic rodent

Fernando García-Moreno; Navneet A. Vasistha; Nonata Trevia; James A. Bourne; Zoltán Molnár

Male Wistar rats were separated from their mother 4.5 hours daily during the first 3 weeks of life. Offspring were weaned on day 21 and housed in same-rearing groups under either standard or enriched conditions. At 60 d of age, all animals were then housed in same-treatment groups, two per cage until testing began on day 74. Emotional and cognitive responses were examined using the open field, novel object recognition test and step down passive avoidance learning. In dorsal hippocampus glucocorticoid receptor (GR) expression and neuronal activity was examined by immunoreactivity. We found that early maternal separation as well as environmental enrichment has independent effect on behavior and hippocampus physiology. There were also interactions between the two postnatal manipulations: some responses affected by MS were reversed by environmental enrichment, but others were not affected or even driven in the same sense. These results provide evidence for the “Match or mismatch” theory of environment during early and later life suggesting that later-life context matters to disentangle the adaptive and maladaptive impact of early adversity.

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Karen Burr

University of Edinburgh

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