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TSHZ1-dependent gene regulation is essential for olfactory bulb development and olfaction
Daniela Ragancokova, Elena Rocca, Anne M.M. Oonk, Herbert Schulz, Elvira Rohde, Jan Bednarsch, Ilse Feenstra, Ronald J.E. Pennings, Hagen Wende, Alistair N. Garratt
Daniela Ragancokova, Elena Rocca, Anne M.M. Oonk, Herbert Schulz, Elvira Rohde, Jan Bednarsch, Ilse Feenstra, Ronald J.E. Pennings, Hagen Wende, Alistair N. Garratt
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Research Article Development Genetics Neuroscience

TSHZ1-dependent gene regulation is essential for olfactory bulb development and olfaction

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Abstract

The olfactory bulb (OB) receives odor information from the olfactory epithelium and relays this to the olfactory cortex. Using a mouse model, we found that development and maturation of OB interneurons depends on the zinc finger homeodomain factor teashirt zinc finger family member 1 (TSHZ1). In mice lacking TSHZ1, neuroblasts exhibited a normal tangential migration to the OB; however, upon arrival to the OB, the neuroblasts were distributed aberrantly within the radial dimension, and many immature neuroblasts failed to exit the rostral migratory stream. Conditional deletion of Tshz1 in mice resulted in OB hypoplasia and severe olfactory deficits. We therefore investigated olfaction in human subjects from families with congenital aural atresia that were heterozygous for TSHZ1 loss-of-function mutations. These individuals displayed hyposmia, which is characterized by impaired odor discrimination and reduced olfactory sensitivity. Microarray analysis, in situ hybridization, and ChIP revealed that TSHZ1 bound to and regulated expression of the gene encoding prokineticin receptor 2 (PROKR2), a G protein–coupled receptor essential for OB development. Mutations in PROKR2 lead to Kallmann syndrome, characterized by anosmia and hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism. Our data indicate that TSHZ1 is a key regulator of mammalian OB development and function and controls the expression of molecules involved in human Kallmann syndrome.

Authors

Daniela Ragancokova, Elena Rocca, Anne M.M. Oonk, Herbert Schulz, Elvira Rohde, Jan Bednarsch, Ilse Feenstra, Ronald J.E. Pennings, Hagen Wende, Alistair N. Garratt

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Figure 1

Tshz1 expression in developing and postnatal OB.

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Tshz1 expression in developing and postnatal OB.
(A) Sagittal sections ...
(A) Sagittal sections of P0.5 forebrains showed a stream of cells migrating from the dLGE in a rostral direction toward the OB (arrowheads). Tshz1+ cells (green, Tshz1 mRNA) were located in this stream. (B) Coronal section of embryonic OB revealed cells expressing TSHZ1 protein (green) weakly in the stream (dotted outline), while in the granule cell layer (GCL), TSHZ1 was strongly expressed together with the neuronal differentiation marker NeuN (red). (C and D) In adult OB (P60), TSHZ1 (green) was prominently expressed together with NeuN (red) in neurons of the granule cell layer and with a subpopulation of neurons in the glomerular layer (GL). TSHZ1 was also weakly expressed within migrating cells of the RMSOB that were not NeuN+. Scale bars: 1 mm (A); 500 μm (C and D); 200 μm (B); 50 μm (B and D, insets).

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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