Central nervous system (CNS) development involves neural patterning, neuronal and axonal migrations, and synapse formation. DSCAM, a chromosome 21 axon guidance molecule, is expressed by CNS neurons during development and throughout adult life. We now report that DSCAM and its chromosome 11 paralog DSCAML1 exhibit inverse ventral-dorsal expression patterns in the developing spinal cord and distinct, partly inverse, expression patterns in the developing cortex, beginning in the Cajal-Retzius cells. In the adult cortex, DSCAM predominates in layer 3/5 pyramidal cells and DSCAML1 predominates in layer 2 granule cells. In the cerebellum, DSCAM is stronger in the Purkinje cells and DSCAML1 in the granule cells. Finally, we find that the predicted DSCAML1 protein contains 60 additional N-terminal amino acids which may contribute to its distinct expression pattern and putative function. We propose that the DSCAMs comprise novel elements of the pathways mediating dorsal-ventral patterning and cell-fate specification in the developing CNS.
(c) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).