Heat shock factor 2 is a stress‐responsive mediator of neuronal migration defects in models of fetal alcohol syndrome

Abstract Fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) is a frequent cause of mental retardation. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying brain development defects induced by maternal alcohol consumption during pregnancy are unclear. We used normal and Hsf2‐deficient mice and cell systems to uncover a...

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Main Authors: Rachid El Fatimy, Federico Miozzo, Anne Le Mouël, Ryma Abane, Leslie Schwendimann, Délara Sabéran‐Djoneidi, Aurélie de Thonel, Illiasse Massaoudi, Liliana Paslaru, Kazue Hashimoto‐Torii, Elisabeth Christians, Pasko Rakic, Pierre Gressens, Valérie Mezger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2014-07-01
Series:EMBO Molecular Medicine
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201303311
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Summary:Abstract Fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) is a frequent cause of mental retardation. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying brain development defects induced by maternal alcohol consumption during pregnancy are unclear. We used normal and Hsf2‐deficient mice and cell systems to uncover a pivotal role for heat shock factor 2 (HSF2) in radial neuronal migration defects in the cortex, a hallmark of fetal alcohol exposure. Upon fetal alcohol exposure, HSF2 is essential for the triggering of HSF1 activation, which is accompanied by distinctive post‐translational modifications, and HSF2 steers the formation of atypical alcohol‐specific HSF1–HSF2 heterocomplexes. This perturbs the in vivo binding of HSF2 to heat shock elements (HSEs) in genes that control neuronal migration in normal conditions, such as p35 or the MAPs (microtubule‐associated proteins, such as Dclk1 and Dcx), and alters their expression. In the absence of HSF2, migration defects as well as alterations in gene expression are reduced. Thus, HSF2, as a sensor for alcohol stress in the fetal brain, acts as a mediator of the neuronal migration defects associated with FASD.
ISSN:1757-4676
1757-4684