Currently, not much is known about neuronal positioning and the roles of primary cilia in postnatal neurodevelopment. We show that primary cilia of principal neurons undergo marked changes in positioning and orientation, concurrent with postnatal neuron positioning in the mouse cerebral cortex. Primary cilia of early- and late-born principal neurons in compact layers display opposite orientations, while neuronal primary cilia in loose laminae are predominantly oriented toward the pia. In contrast, astrocytes and interneurons, and neurons in nucleated brain regions do not display specific cilia directionality. We further discovered that the cell bodies of principal neurons in inside-out laminated regions spanning from the hippocampal CA1 region to neocortex undergo a slow ‘reverse movement’ for postnatal positioning and lamina refinement. Furthermore, selective disruption of cilia function in the forebrain leads to altered lamination and gyrification in the retrosplenial cortex that is formed by reverse movement. Collectively, this study identifies reverse movement as a fundamental process for principal cell positioning that refines lamination in the cerebral cortex and casts light on the evolutionary transition from three-layered allocortices to six-layered neocortices.

Author contributions

Conceptualization: X.C.; Data curation: J.Y.; Formal analysis: J.Y., X.C.; Investigation: J.Y., S.M., L.Q., K.B., A.D.G., K.J.L., X.C.; Methodology: L.Q., M.L., X.C.; Software: M.L.; Supervision: L.Q., X.C.; Validation: J.Y., L.Q.; Visualization: X.C., J.Y.; Writing – original draft: J.Y., X.C.

Funding

This study was supported by the National Institutes of Health (K01AG054729, P20GM113131-7006, R15MH126317-01 and R15MH125305-01 to X.C.), by University of New Hampshire CoRE PRP awards and Cole Neuroscience and Behavioral Faculty Research awards to X.C., by University of New Hampshire Summer TA Research Fellowships (STAF) to J.Y. and S.M., by a Dissertation Year Fellowship to J.Y., and by a SURF award from the University of New Hampshire Hamel Center for Undergraduate Research to D.K. Deposited in PMC for release after 12 months.

Data availability

All relevant data can be found within the article and its supplementary information.

The people behind the papers

This article has an associated ‘The people behind the papers’ interview with some of the authors.

You do not currently have access to this content.