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LINE-1 retrotransposons contribute to mouse PV interneuron development

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-02, 05:02 authored by GO Bodea, JM Botto, ME Ferreiro, FJ Sanchez-Luque, J de los Rios Barreda, J Rasmussen, MA Rahman, LR Fenlon, N Jansz, C Gubert, P Gerdes, LG Bodea, P Ajjikuttira, DJ Da Costa Guevara, L Cumner, CC Bell, P Kozulin, V Billon, S Morell, MJHC Kempen, Chloe Love, K Saha, LM Palmer, AD Ewing, DJ Jhaveri, SR Richardson, AJ Hannan, GJ Faulkner
AbstractRetrotransposons are mobile DNA sequences duplicated via transcription and reverse transcription of an RNA intermediate. Cis-regulatory elements encoded by retrotransposons can also promote the transcription of adjacent genes. Somatic LINE-1 (L1) retrotransposon insertions have been detected in mammalian neurons. It is, however, unclear whether L1 sequences are mobile in only some neuronal lineages or therein promote neurodevelopmental gene expression. Here we report programmed L1 activation by SOX6, a transcription factor critical for parvalbumin (PV) interneuron development. Mouse PV interneurons permit L1 mobilization in vitro and in vivo, harbor unmethylated L1 promoters and express full-length L1 mRNAs and proteins. Using nanopore long-read sequencing, we identify unmethylated L1s proximal to PV interneuron genes, including a novel L1 promoter-driven Caps2 transcript isoform that enhances neuron morphological complexity in vitro. These data highlight the contribution made by L1 cis-regulatory elements to PV interneuron development and transcriptome diversity, uncovered due to L1 mobility in this milieu.<p></p>

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Location

New York, N.Y.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Nature Neuroscience

Volume

27

Pagination

1274-1284

ISSN

1097-6256

eISSN

1546-1726

Publisher

Nature