, 21st postnatal day. Oomen et al., 2009. Doublecortin (DCX) is a
microtubule-associated protein expressed by neuronal precursor cells and immature
neurons in embryonic and adult cortical structures. Neuronal precursor cells begin to express DCX while actively dividing, and their neuronal daughter cells continue to express DCX for 2–3 weeks as the cells mature into neurons. Downregulation of DCX begins after 2 weeks, and occurs at the same time that these cells begin to express
NeuN, a neuronal marker. Due to the nearly exclusive expression of DCX in developing neurons, this
protein has been used increasingly as a marker for
neurogenesis. Indeed, levels of DCX expression increase in response to exercise, and that increase occurs in parallel with increased
BrdU labeling, which is currently a "gold standard" in measuring neurogenesis. Doublecortin was found to
bind to the
microtubule cytoskeleton.
In vivo and
in vitro assays show that Doublecortin stabilizes microtubules and causes bundling. Doublecortin is a
basic protein with an
iso-electric point of 10 typical of microtubule-binding
proteins. == Knock out mouse ==