Published online Mar 26, 2015. doi: 10.4252/wjsc.v7.i2.300
Peer-review started: July 25, 2014
First decision: August 28, 2014
Revised: September 24, 2014
Accepted: November 17, 2014
Article in press: November 19, 2014
Published online: March 26, 2015
Processing time: 238 Days and 9.8 Hours
Neural stem cells (NSCs) and imprinted genes play an important role in brain development. On historical grounds, these two determinants have been largely studied independently of each other. Recent evidence suggests, however, that NSCs can reset select genomic imprints to prevent precocious depletion of the stem cell reservoir. Moreover, imprinted genes like the transcriptional regulator Zac1 can fine tune neuronal vs astroglial differentiation of NSCs. Zac1 binds in a sequence-specific manner to pro-neuronal and imprinted genes to confer transcriptional regulation and furthermore coregulates members of the p53-family in NSCs. At the genome scale, Zac1 is a central hub of an imprinted gene network comprising genes with an important role for NSC quiescence, proliferation and differentiation. Overall, transcriptional, epigenomic, and genomic mechanisms seem to coordinate the functional relationships of NSCs and imprinted genes from development to maturation, and possibly aging.
Core tip: Both neural stem cells (NSCs) and imprinted genes participate in the same developmental processes. Here, we will explore the possibility that these two processes actually interact with each other. We will exemplarily consider the role of single imprinted genes in NSC biology based on their functional relationship to the imprinted gene Zac1, which is itself at the focus of this review due to its role in directing neuronal vs astroglial differentiation of NSCs and as a central hub of an imprinted gene network comprising genes important to NSC biology.