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Dive into the research topics where Ryann M. Fame is active.

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Featured researches published by Ryann M. Fame.


Trends in Neurosciences | 2011

Development, specification, and diversity of callosal projection neurons

Ryann M. Fame; Jessica L. MacDonald; Jeffrey D. Macklis

Callosal projection neurons (CPN) are a diverse population of neocortical projection neurons that connect the two hemispheres of the cerebral cortex via the corpus callosum. They play key roles in high-level associative connectivity, and have been implicated in cognitive syndromes of high-level associative dysfunction, such as autism spectrum disorders. CPN evolved relatively recently compared to other cortical neuron populations, and have undergone disproportionately large expansion from mouse to human. While much is known about the anatomical trajectory of developing CPN axons, and progress has been made in identifying cellular and molecular controls over midline crossing, only recently have molecular-genetic controls been identified that specify CPN populations, and help define CPN subpopulations. In this review, we discuss the development, diversity and evolution of CPN.


Nature Neuroscience | 2009

SOX6 controls dorsal progenitor identity and interneuron diversity during neocortical development

Eiman Azim; Denis Jabaudon; Ryann M. Fame; Jeffrey D. Macklis

The neuronal diversity of the CNS emerges largely from controlled spatial and temporal segregation of cell type-specific molecular regulators. We found that the transcription factor SOX6 controls the molecular segregation of dorsal (pallial) from ventral (subpallial) telencephalic progenitors and the differentiation of cortical interneurons, regulating forebrain progenitor and interneuron heterogeneity. During corticogenesis in mice, SOX6 and SOX5 were largely mutually exclusively expressed in pallial and subpallial progenitors, respectively, and remained mutually exclusive in a reverse pattern in postmitotic neuronal progeny. Loss of SOX6 from pallial progenitors caused their inappropriate expression of normally subpallium-restricted developmental controls, conferring mixed dorsal-ventral identity. In postmitotic cortical interneurons, loss of SOX6 disrupted the differentiation and diversity of cortical interneuron subtypes, analogous to SOX5 control over cortical projection neuron development. These data indicate that SOX6 is a central regulator of both progenitor and cortical interneuron diversity during neocortical development.


Neural Development | 2006

Second-order projection from the posterior lateral line in the early zebrafish brain

Ryann M. Fame; Carole Brajon; Alain Ghysen

BackgroundMechanosensory information gathered by hair cells of the fish lateral-line system is collected by sensory neurons and sent to the ipsilateral hindbrain. The information is then conveyed to other brain structures through a second-order projection. In the adult, part of the second-order projection extends to the contralateral hindbrain, while another part connects to a midbrain structure, the torus semicircularis.ResultsIn this paper we examine the second-order projection from the posterior lateral-line system in late embryonic/early larval zebrafish. At four days after fertilization the synaptic field of the sensory neurons can be accurately targeted, allowing a very reproducible labeling of second-order neurons. We show that second-order projections are highly stereotyped, that they vary according to rhombomeric identity, and that they are almost completely lateralized. We also show that the projections extend not only to the contralateral hindbrain and torus semicircularis but to many other brain centers as well, including gaze- and posture-controlling nuclei in the midbrain, and presumptive thalamic nuclei.ConclusionWe propose that the extensive connectivity observed in early brain development reveals a basic scaffold common to most vertebrates, from which different subsets are later reinforced in various vertebrate groups. The large repertoire of projection targets provides a promising system to study the genetic encoding of this differential projection capacity.


Cerebral Cortex | 2017

Subtype-Specific Genes that Characterize Subpopulations of Callosal Projection Neurons in Mouse Identify Molecularly Homologous Populations in Macaque Cortex

Ryann M. Fame; Colette Dehay; Henry Kennedy; Jeffrey D. Macklis

Abstract Callosal projection neurons (CPN) interconnect the neocortical hemispheres via the corpus callosum and are implicated in associative integration of multimodal information. CPN have undergone differential evolutionary elaboration, leading to increased diversity of cortical neurons—and more extensive and varied connections in neocortical gray and white matter—in primates compared with rodents. In mouse, distinct sets of genes are enriched in discrete subpopulations of CPN, indicating the molecular diversity of rodent CPN. Elements of rodent CPN functional and organizational diversity might thus be present in the further elaborated primate cortex. We address the hypothesis that genes controlling mouse CPN subtype diversity might reflect molecular patterns shared among mammals that arose prior to the divergence of rodents and primates. We find that, while early expression of the examined CPN‐enriched genes, and postmigratory expression of these CPN‐enriched genes in deep layers are highly conserved (e.g., Ptn, Nnmt, Cited2, Dkk3), in contrast, the examined genes expressed by superficial layer CPN show more variable levels of conservation (e.g., EphA3, Chn2). These results suggest that there has been evolutionarily differential retraction and elaboration of superficial layer CPN subpopulations between mouse and macaque, with independent derivation of novel populations in primates. Together, these data inform future studies regarding CPN subpopulations that are unique to primates and rodents, and indicate putative evolutionary relationships.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2016

Cited2 Regulates Neocortical Layer II/III Generation and Somatosensory Callosal Projection Neuron Development and Connectivity

Ryann M. Fame; Jessica L. MacDonald; Sally L. Dunwoodie; Emi Takahashi; Jeffrey D. Macklis

The neocortex contains hundreds to thousands of distinct subtypes of precisely connected neurons, allowing it to perform remarkably complex tasks of high-level cognition. Callosal projection neurons (CPN) connect the cerebral hemispheres via the corpus callosum, integrating cortical information and playing key roles in associative cognition. CPN are a strikingly diverse set of neuronal subpopulations, and development of this diversity requires precise control by a complex, interactive set of molecular effectors. We have found that the transcriptional coregulator Cited2 regulates and refines two stages of CPN development. Cited2 is expressed broadly by progenitors in the embryonic day 15.5 subventricular zone, during the peak of superficial layer CPN birth, with a progressive postmitotic refinement in expression, becoming restricted to CPN of the somatosensory cortex postnatally. We generated progenitor-stage and postmitotic forebrain-specific Cited2 conditional knock-out mice, using the Emx1-Cre and NEX-Cre mouse lines, respectively. We demonstrate that Cited2 functions in progenitors, but is not necessary postmitotically, to regulate both (1) broad generation of layer II/III CPN and (2) acquisition of precise area-specific molecular identity and axonal/dendritic connectivity of somatosensory CPN. This novel CPN subtype-specific and area-specific control from progenitor action of Cited2 adds yet another layer of complexity to the multistage developmental regulation of neocortical development. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT This study identifies Cited2 as a novel subtype-specific and area-specific control over development of distinct subpopulations within the broad population of callosal projection neurons (CPN), whose axons connect the two cerebral hemispheres via the corpus callosum (CC). Currently, how the remarkable diversity of CPN subtypes is specified, and how they differentiate to form highly precise and specific circuits, are largely unknown. We found that Cited2 functions within subventricular zone progenitors to both broadly regulate generation of superficial layer CPN throughout the neocortex, and to refine precise area-specific development and connectivity of somatosensory CPN. Gaining insight into molecular development and heterogeneity of CPN will advance understanding of both diverse functions of CPN and of the remarkable range of neurodevelopmental deficits correlated with CPN/CC development.


Patterning and Cell Type Specification in the Developing CNS and PNS#R##N#Comprehensive Developmental Neuroscience | 2013

Specification of Cortical Projection Neurons: Transcriptional Mechanisms

Jessica L. MacDonald; Ryann M. Fame; Eiman Azim; Sara J. Shnider; Bradley J. Molyneaux; Paola Arlotta; Jeffrey D. Macklis

Abstract The mammalian neocortex is most evolutionarily advanced region of the brain, responsible for sensory perception, integrative-associative function, voluntary motor control, and high-level cognition; it has undergone dramatic expansion during evolution. This capacity for high-order processing emerges from a complex, yet highly organized, six-layered sheet-like structure divided into functionally and cytoarchitectonically distinct areas that contain many distinct neuronal subtypes with function-specific molecular, connectivity and physiological properties. Here, the development and organization of the neocortex are reviewed in the context of recent results revealing functions of individual and combinatorial sets of genes in controlling specification, development, connectivity, and areal function-specific diversity of distinct projection neuron subtypes. First, we describe the diversity of progenitors that give rise to the projection neurons of the neocortex, and discuss current knowledge regarding molecular-genetic programs that regulate progenitor specification, lineage potential, and plasticity. Next, we focus on two distinct, broad projection neuron classes, corticofugal (cortical output) projection neurons and callosal projection neurons (the dominant inter-hemispheric neurons in placental mammals). We describe recent advances in understanding the interplay of combinatorial and sequential molecular-genetic controls over the precise generation and diversity of these developmentally and clinically important neuronal subtypes. Then, we review some possibilities for applying the expanding knowledge of developmental biology of neocortical subtype-specific differentiation toward directed differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells and cellular repair strategies. Finally, we briefly discuss an emerging field regarding implementation of circuit-specific axonal connectivity, circuit formation, and function by subtype-specific subcellular domains, in particular growth cones.


eNeuro | 2018

Caveolin1 identifies a specific subpopulation of cerebral cortex callosal projection neurons (CPN) including dual projecting cortical callosal/frontal projection neurons (CPN/FPN)

Jessica L. MacDonald; Ryann M. Fame; Eva M. Gillis-Buck; Jeffrey D. Macklis

Abstract The neocortex is composed of many distinct subtypes of neurons that must form precise subtype-specific connections to enable the cortex to perform complex functions. Callosal projection neurons (CPN) are the broad population of commissural neurons that connect the cerebral hemispheres via the corpus callosum (CC). Currently, how the remarkable diversity of CPN subtypes and connectivity is specified, and how they differentiate to form highly precise and specific circuits, are largely unknown. We identify in mouse that the lipid-bound scaffolding domain protein Caveolin 1 (CAV1) is specifically expressed by a unique subpopulation of Layer V CPN that maintain dual ipsilateral frontal projections to premotor cortex. CAV1 is expressed by over 80% of these dual projecting callosal/frontal projection neurons (CPN/FPN), with expression peaking early postnatally as axonal and dendritic targets are being reached and refined. CAV1 is localized to the soma and dendrites of CPN/FPN, a unique population of neurons that shares information both between hemispheres and with premotor cortex, suggesting function during postmitotic development and refinement of these neurons, rather than in their specification. Consistent with this, we find that Cav1 function is not necessary for the early specification of CPN/FPN, or for projecting to their dual axonal targets. CPN subtype-specific expression of Cav1 identifies and characterizes a first molecular component that distinguishes this functionally unique projection neuron population, a population that expands in primates, and is prototypical of additional dual and higher-order projection neuron subtypes.


eLife | 2018

Downregulation of ribosome biogenesis during early forebrain development

Kevin F. Chau; Morgan L. Shannon; Ryann M. Fame; Erin Fonseca; Hillary Mullan; Matthew B. Johnson; Anoop K. Sendamarai; Mark W. Springel; Benoit Laurent; Maria K. Lehtinen

Forebrain precursor cells are dynamic during early brain development, yet the underlying molecular changes remain elusive. We observed major differences in transcriptional signatures of precursor cells from mouse forebrain at embryonic days E8.5 vs. E10.5 (before vs. after neural tube closure). Genes encoding protein biosynthetic machinery were strongly downregulated at E10.5. This was matched by decreases in ribosome biogenesis and protein synthesis, together with age-related changes in proteomic content of the adjacent fluids. Notably, c-MYC expression and mTOR pathway signaling were also decreased at E10.5, providing potential drivers for the effects on ribosome biogenesis and protein synthesis. Interference with c-MYC at E8.5 prematurely decreased ribosome biogenesis, while persistent c-MYC expression in cortical progenitors increased transcription of protein biosynthetic machinery and enhanced ribosome biogenesis, as well as enhanced progenitor proliferation leading to subsequent macrocephaly. These findings indicate large, coordinated changes in molecular machinery of forebrain precursors during early brain development.


American Journal of Pathology | 2018

Mice Expressing c-MYC in Neural Precursors Develop Choroid Plexus and Ciliary Body Tumors

Morgan L. Shannon; Ryann M. Fame; Kevin F. Chau; Neil Dani; Monica L. Calicchio; Gwenaëlle S. G. Géléoc; Hart G.W. Lidov; Sanda Alexandrescu; Maria K. Lehtinen

Choroid plexus tumors and ciliary body medulloepithelioma are predominantly pediatric neoplasms. Progress in understanding the pathogenesis of these tumors has been hindered by their rarity and lack of models that faithfully recapitulate the disease. Here, we find that endogenous Myc proto-oncogene protein is down-regulated in the forebrain neuroepithelium, whose neural plate border domains give rise to the anterior choroid plexus and ciliary body. To uncover the consequences of persistent Myc expression, MYC expression was forced in multipotent neural precursors (nestin-Cre:Myc), which produced fully penetrant models of choroid plexus carcinoma and ciliary body medulloepithelioma. Nestin-mediated MYC expression in the epithelial cells of choroid plexus leads to the regionalized formation of choroid plexus carcinoma in the posterior domain of the lateral ventricle choroid plexus and the fourth ventricle choroid plexus that is accompanied by loss of multiple cilia, up-regulation of protein biosynthetic machinery, and hydrocephalus. Parallel MYC expression in the ciliary body leads also to up-regulation of protein biosynthetic machinery. Additionally, Myc expression in human choroid plexus tumors increases with aggressiveness of disease. Collectively, our findings expose a select vulnerability of the neuroepithelial lineage to postnatal tumorigenesis and provide a new mouse model for investigating the pathogenesis of these rare pediatric neoplasms.


Fluids and Barriers of the CNS | 2016

Directional cerebrospinal fluid movement between brain ventricles in larval zebrafish

Ryann M. Fame; Jessica T. Chang; Alex Hong; Nicole A. Aponte-Santiago; Hazel Sive

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Jessica L. MacDonald

University of British Columbia

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Eiman Azim

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Maria K. Lehtinen

Boston Children's Hospital

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Morgan L. Shannon

Boston Children's Hospital

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Alex Hong

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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