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Neurogenesis and Migration

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Title: Neurogenesis and Migration


1
Neurogenesis and Migration
  • Jeff Corwin
  • 924-1568
  • jcorwin_at_virginia.edu
  • MR-4, 5th Floor, Rm 5150
  • (Next to Kevin Lee)

2
  • The human brain contains
  • 100 billion neurons.
  • On average each neuron make contacts with 10,000
    other neurons.
  • Therefore, its estimated that the human brain
    contains 1 quadrillion synapses.
  • (Human brain also contain 1 trillion glial
    cells.)

3
  • There are 100,000,000,000 neurons in the human
    brain.
  • A 9-month human gestation period is 403,200
    minutes. (280 days, with 24 hours/day, and 60
    minutes/hour).
  • Therefore, if all the neurons in the human brain
    were produced before birth, the average rate of
    production would be 250,000 neurons/minute.

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Primary Neurulation
7
Primary Neurulation
8
The Development of the Vertebrate Spinal Cord
Alar
Basal
General Rule 1 Alar plate gt Sensory Basal plate
gt Motor
General Rule 2 No cell in the vertebrate NS is
more than one neuron from the CNS. (with one
system exception).
9
The Development of the Vertebrate Brain
10
General Rule 3
  • Most CNS neurons are generated far from the
    sites theyll occupy in the adult CNS.

11
General Rule 4
  • Large, principal neurons are generated early
    in development.
  • Usually small interneurons are generated late.

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Current understanding arose from
  • descriptive neuroanatomy
  • 3H-thymidine and BrdU "birthdating"
  • serial section electron microscopic (EM)
    reconstructions
  • reconstituted cultures
  • time-lapse viewing of cultured slices.

13
Stage 20 (E12.5) Rat (section prepared by
Themis Karaoli).
14
A father and daughter effort by Fred (1935) and
Mary Sauer (1959) over a 24-year period
eventually convinced others of the
pseudostratified nature of the early neural tube
and the role of nuclear movements in vertebrate
neurogenesis.
15
G1
S G2
M
G1
16
Kathy Tosney
17
Anti-phospho-histone H3 in a Stage 20 (E12.5)
Rat (prepared by Themis Karaoli.
18
What are the functions of the interkinetic
nuclear migrations that occur in all developing
vertebrate neuroepithelia?
19
Cell division orientation can influence the fate
of the progeny produced by a division.
20
How cell division orientation influences cell fate
21
Neurogenesis and Migration in the Cerebral Cortex
  • The single-cell thick neuroepithelium persists to
    the three-vesicle stage of brain development
    (General "Rule 5).
  • Then the preplate begins to develop at the
    outside (i.e., away from the apical ventricular
    surfaces of the cells).
  • The preplate consists of an outer marginal zone
    containing large, stellate Cajal-Retzius cells
    and a deeper zone of cells called the subplate.

22
  • Next, new postmitotic neurons accumulate in the
    preplate to form the cortical plate.
  • The expanding cortical plate progressively
    divides the preplate region into the marginal
    zone composed of Cajal-Retzius cells and subplate
    cells (The subplate cells will die off later).
  • Beneath that is the intermediate zone composed of
    increasing numbers of incoming axons and beneath
    that is the proliferative ventricular zone.

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Migration in the forming Cerebral Cortex
  • The accumulation of new neurons in the cortical
    plate results in great expansion of the
    presumptive cerebral cortex.
  • Radial glia span the full thickness of the
    forming cerebral cortex (3 mm) and serve as
    guides for the migration of neurons from the
    ventricular zone outward as shown by careful
    serial section EM reconstructions by Rakic.

25
From the work of Pasko Rakic
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The Cerebral Cortex forms in an inside-out
pattern
  • When cells go through their final (terminal)
    cell division they will remain maximally labeled
    by a correctly timed pulse of 3H-thymidine.
  • Other cells that continue to divide will dilute
    the label during the time after the pulse.
  • Jay Angevine Richard Sidman, and later Pasko
    Rakic, and Joseph Altman Shirley Bayer mapped
    the eventual adult locations of neurons that had
    completed their terminal cell division at various
    times during development.

27
From the work of Angevine Sidman
28
From the work of Pasko Rakic
29
Secondary neurogenesis
  • Initially proliferation occurs exclusively in the
    ventricular zone (VZ, from E11 to 14 in mouse)
  • Later in development (at E16 in mouse), the
    Subventricular zone (SVZ) becomes an important
    secondary site of proliferation.

30
Secondary neurogenesis
  • In the mouse proliferation ceases in the VZ at
    E19, but it continues in the SVZ at substantial
    levels into the 2nd postnatal week in mouse, and
    in humans it continues through the 2nd year of
    life.
  • Secondary neurogenesis gives rise to many small
    neurons (e.g., hippocampal and some cerebellar
    granule cells).

31
Neurogenesis in the adult brains of birds and
mammals can occur in the subventricular zone and
some may also occur in the ventricular zone.
From Arturo Alvarez-Bullya
32
General Rule 6
  • The neurons in the brainstem nuclei also arise
    through production in the ventricular zone and
    migrate over considerable distances to their
    ultimate location.
  • Often the neurons of a nucleus all have the same
    birthday, i.e. time in development when they
    were produced by a terminal cell division.

33
The Five Major Cell Types of the Cerebellar Cortex
  • Purkinje cells
  • Granule cells
  • Stellate cells
  • Basket cells
  • Golgi cells
  • Parallel fibers
  • Climbing fibers
  • Mossy fibers

34
Please see the "Cerebellum Fact Sheet" for
further details on the form and functions of the
circuitry of the cerebellar cortex.
35
Neurogenesis and migration in the cerebellum
  • Purkinje cells arise via early neurogenesis in
    the ventricular zone above the IVth ventricle
    (from E11 to E14 in mouse).
  • The great majority of the cerebellar granule
    cells are derived from proliferative cells that
    migrate from the Rhombic Lip to lie external to
    the Purkinje cells.
  • Those proliferative cells form the External
    Germinal Layer (EGL).

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3
2
1
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Neurogenesis and migration in the cerebellum
(continued)
  • In mice the EGL is 1 to 2 cells thick at E16, but
    proliferation there continues until P15 giving
    rise to granule cells that eventually outnumber
    the Purkinje cells at least 2501 in the mouse
    (at least 4001 in humans).
  • Migrating granule cells descend from the EGL
    along Bergmann glial fibers until they come to a
    position below the somata of the Purkinje cells.
  • In humans there are granule cells migrating from
    the EGL as late as 2 years after birth.

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  • The development of reconstituted migratory
    cultures of cerebellar granule cells allowed Mary
    Beth Hatten and her coworkers to ask how neurons
    adhere to glial fibers.
  • Tests of antibodies to NCAM, N-cadherin, and L1
    did not interfere with migration, but an
    antiserum they raised against cerebellar granule
    cells inhibited migration significantly.

42
  • They presumed that their antiserum bound to a new
    adhesion molecule that functioned in migration,
    so they absorbed the antiserum with other neural
    cells and other cell types, in order to try to
    remove any antibodies from the serum that might
    have recognized common cell adhesion molecules.
  • That strategy left them with an antiserum that
    labeled a single band of 100 kDa, which they
    named astrotactin.

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The Birth of Childhood
  • Neurogenesis in the brains of all primates occurs
    at high rates before birth.
  • As a result the brain-weights/ body-weight ratios
    of newborn apes and humans are comparable.
  • The rate of neurogenesis decreases substantially
    after birth in apes, but it continues through the
    2nd year of life for humans.

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The Birth of Childhood (continued)
  • The continuation of a high rate of neurogenesis
    after birth of humans is responsible for adult
    human brain-weight / body-weight ratios that are
    3.5 times those of other adult primates.
  • It has been suggested that the increased capacity
    for learning that originated through the
    continuing high rate of postnatal neurogenesis
    in humans resulted in the development of
    childhood.

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The Birth of Childhood (continued)
  • Childhood can be viewed as a stage in development
    unique to humans.
  • Childhood is interposed between infancy, ending
    in 3 year olds with weaning, and the juvenile
    stage, beginning in 7 year olds, with the
    development of the capacity to gather food
    independently of adults.
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