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1.
The cellular distribution and intracellular localization of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) has been studied by electron microscopic immunocytochemistry in the brain of the rat and of the mouse. Although the intensity of staining was less in the mouse, the same structures were positive in both species. In the cerebrum, the neuronal perikarya and dendrites were intensely stained, but staining was almost entirely absent in the presynaptic terminals. The deep neurons of the brain stem were also positive. In the cerebellum, perikarya, axons, and parallel fibers of the granule cell neurons were stained as were the synaptic vesicles and presynaptic membranes of the synapses between the parallel fibers and the Purkinje cell dendrites. Golgi cell dendrites, basket cells and their axons, and mossy fibers were also positive. In contrast, the Purkinje cells including their dendrites, and the climbing fibers that formed synapses with the Purkinje cell dendrites were not stained. The majority of the myelinated axons in both the cerebrum and the cerebellum did not stain, but the fibrillary astrocytic processes between myelinated axons in the white matter did. Oligodendroglia, protoplasmic astrocytes, Bergmann glia, astrocytes investing capillaries, and vascular endothelial cells were negative for reaction product. In the positively staining cells and their processes, the positivity was dispersed throughout the cytoplasm and corresponded most closely to the distribution of ribosomes, the granular endoplasmic reticulum, and microtubules. Nuclei, mitochondria, the cisternae of the Golgi complex, myelin lamellae, and most membranes were not stained.  相似文献   

2.
In order to study the molecular mechanisms of neurogenesis, monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were produced against antigens of the developing rat hippocampus. MAb 3G7-F8 was used for immunohistochemical localization of the corresponding antigen of paraffin sections of the rat brain at days 0, 5, 14, and 21 of the postnatal development. In the hippocampus of newborn and 5-day-old rats, positive immunostaining was observed in the cytoplasm and proximal segments of processes of neurons located in granular, polymorph, and pyramidal layers, as well as in entorhinal cortex. In granule cell bodies and neurons of entorhinal cortex specific staining decreased by day 14 and disappeared by day 21 after birth, whereas neurons of pyramidal and polymorph layers remained immunopositive. Diffuse specific staining in the cerebellum was observed beginning from day 5 after birth in the Purkinje cell layer. On days 14-21 positive reaction was observed in Purkinje cell bodies and in the layer containing dendrites of Purkinje cells and parallel fibers. External and internal granular layers remained immunonegative. No specific staining was observed in other regions of the brain, as well as in the control slices. These data suggest that the antigen detected by the 3G7-F8 antibody is involved in the formation of the neuronal connections.  相似文献   

3.
Localization of 4.1 related proteins in cerebellar neurons   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Localization of 4.1 related proteins in neurons was studied with immunofluorescence microscopy and with immunoelectron microscopy on ultrathin cryosections. In rat cerebellum, 4.1 immunoreactive proteins were demonstrated in Purkinje cell bodies, dendrites and other neurons in the cerebellar cortex. Some glial cells showed staining, but no labeling was found in myelinated axons of the white matter and of the glomeruli in the granule cell layer. At the ultrastructural level, the 4.1 related proteins were localized mainly in the cytoplasmic matrix, while some labeling was found underneath the plasma membrane. To determine whether 4.1 related proteins in neuronal cytoplasm exist as part of the cytoskeleton or not, PC12 cells cultured in the presence of nerve growth factor were stained with the anti-4.1 antibody. Since cytoplasmic staining was retained after detergent treatment, the 4.1 related proteins seem to exist as a component of the neural cell cytoskeleton. Localization of 4.1 related proteins during the postnatal development of the cerebellum was also studied. In Purkinje cells, localization of 4.1 related proteins changed according to the stages of the postnatal development. The present data suggest that 4.1 related proteins in neurons localized mainly in the cytoplasm and may play some role in organizing cytoskeletal networks in the cytomatrix. Their distribution is developmentally regulated in some neurons, possibly in relationship to their maturation in the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

4.
A monoclonal antibody designated M2 arose from the fusion of mouse myeloma cells with splenocytes from a rat immunized with particulate fraction from early postnatal mouse cerebellum. Expression of M2 antigen was examined by indirect immunofluorescence on frozen sections of developing and adult mouse cerebellum and on monolayer cultures of early postnatal mouse cerebellar cells. In adult cerebellum, M2 staining outlines the cell bodies of granule and Purkinje cells. A weaker, more diffuse staining is seen in the molecular layer and white matter. In sections of newborn cerebellum, M2 antigen is weakly detectable surrounding cells of the external granular layer and Purkinje cells. The expression of M2 antigen increases during development in both cell types, reaching adult levels by postnatal day 14. At all stages of postnatal cerebellar development, granule cells that have completed migration to the internal granule layer are more heavily stained by M2 antibodies than are those before and in process of migration. In monolayer cultures, M2 antigen is detected on the cell surface Of all GFA protein-positive astrocytes and on more immature oligodendrocytes, that express 04 antigen but not 01 antigen. After 3 days in culture, tetanus toxinpositive neurons begin to express M2 antigen. The same delayed expression of M2 antigen on neurons is observed in cultures derived from mice ranging in age from postnatal day 0 to 10.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The morphology of postnatal differentiation of the Golgi apparatus, the nucleus, the perikaryon, and the dendrites was studied in Purkinje cells of the rat cerebellum for 30 days after birth using histochemical, histological, and electron microscopic methods.The Golgi apparatus during differentiation undergoes morphological and positional changes. From the 1st to 7th postnatal day, the Golgi apparatus is found in a supranuclear position, and is connected with the axes of differentiating primary dendrites by beam-like processes. From days 8 to 11 this connection disappears, and most of the Golgi apparatus assumes a lateronuclear and infranuclear position. After the 11th or 12th day, the Golgi apparatus is found in perinuclear and peripheral cytoplasmic positions. The formation of granular endoplasmic reticulum occurs in the vicinity of the perinuclear Golgi apparatus. The differentiation of cell and nuclear forms requires approximately 20 days. The morphological changes of differentiation are discussed in relation to the participation of the Golgi apparatus in the differentiation of dendrites and in the formation of the granular endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract: The expression of high-molecular-weight (HMW) microtubule-associated protein-2 (MAP-2) expressing exon 8 (MAP-2+8) was examined by immunoblotting during rat brain development and in sections of human CNS. In rat brain, HMW MAP-2+8 expression was detected at embryonic day 21 and increased during postnatal development. In adult rats, HMW MAP-2+8 comigrated with MAP-2a. In human adult brain, HMW MAP-2+8 was expressed in select neuronal populations, including pyramidal neurons of layers III and V of the neocortex and parahippocampal cortex, pyramidal neurons in the endplate, CA2 and subiculum of the hippocampus, and the medium-sized neurons of the basal ganglia. In the cerebellum, a subpopulation of Golgi neurons in the internal granular cell layer and most Purkinje cells were also stained. In the spinal cord staining was observed in large neurons of the anterior horn. Staining was present in cell bodies and dendrites but not in axons. At the ultra-structural level, HMW MAP-2+8 immunoreactivity was observed on mitochondrial membranes and in postsynaptic densities (PSDs) of some asymmetric synapses in the midfrontal cortex and spinal cord. Immunoblots of proteins isolated from enriched mitochondrial and PSD fractions from adult human frontal lobe and rat brains confirmed the presence of HMW MAP-2+8. The presence of HMW MAP-2+8 in dendrites and in close proximity to PSDs supports a role in structural and functional attributes of select excitatory CNS synapses.  相似文献   

7.
The hyaluronic acid-binding region was prepared by trypsin digestion of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan aggregate from the Swarm rat chondrosarcoma, and biotinylated in the presence of hyaluronic acid and link protein. After isolation by gel filtration and HPLC in 4 M guanidine HCl, the biotinylated hyaluronic acid-binding region was used, in conjunction with avidin-peroxidase, as a specific probe for the light and electron microscopic localization of hyaluronic acid in developing and mature rat cerebellum. At 1 w postnatal, there is strong staining of extracellular hyaluronic acid in the presumptive white matter, in the internal granule cell layer, and as a dense band at the base of the molecular layer, surrounding the parallel fibers. This staining moves progressively towards the pial surface during the second postnatal week, and extracellular staining remains predominant through postnatal week three. In adult brain, there is no significant extracellular staining of hyaluronic acid, which is most apparent in the granule cell cytoplasm, and intra-axonally in parallel fibers and some myelinated axons. The white matter is also unstained in adult brain, and no staining was seen in Purkinje cell bodies or dendrites at any age. The localization of hyaluronic acid and its developmental changes are very similar to that previously found in immunocytochemical studies of the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan in nervous tissue (Aquino, D. A., R. U. Margolis, and R. K. Margolis. 1984. J. Cell Biol. 99:1117-1129; Aquino, D. A., R. U. Margolis, and R. K. Margolis. J. Cell Biol. 99:1130-1139), and to recent results from studies using monoclonal antibodies to the hyaluronic acid-binding region and link protein. The presence of brain hyaluronic acid in the form of aggregates with chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans would be consistent with their similar localizations and coordinate developmental changes.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract: A60 is a 60-kDa component of the axonal cortical cytoskeleton in CNS neurones. It appears to be neurone specific and is tightly bound to brain membranes. In this study the cytoskeletal activities and developmental expression of A60 in rat cerebellum have been examined using the monoclonal antibody DR1. A60 in a partially purified soluble extract of brain membranes interacts selectively with brain but not erythrocyte spectrin. Because erythrocyte spectrin is more closely related to the dendritic form of spectrin than the axonal form, this raises the possibility that AGO localises in axons by interaction with the axonal form of spectrin only. A60 is not found in rat cerebellum before the day of birth. However, during postnatal development of the cerebellum (days 1–13) DR1 reactivity appears progressively. On postnatal day 1, a small population of cells in the mantle layer (presumptive Purkinje cells) is DR1 positive. There is no DR1 reactivity found in Purkinje cell axons during their initial phase of growth. By postnatal day 7, Purkinje cell bodies, initial dendritic segments, and the cerebellar white matter are all positive. This pattern of labelling is strengthened up until postnatal day 13. By contrast, in adult rat cerebellum, the location of A60 has changed so that it is most concentrated in axons, and dendritic staining is lost. These data indicate that A60 is a spectrin-binding component of the adult axonal membrane skeleton, the presence of which is only required in axons after the initial phase of growth.  相似文献   

9.
Immunohistochemical staining with monoclonal antibodies showed that microtubule-associated protein 1 (MAP1) has a restricted cellular distribution in the rat cerebellum. Anti-MAP1 staining was found only in neurons, where it was much stronger in dendrites than in axons. There were striking variations in the apparent concentration of MAP1 in different classes of neurons. Purkinje cells were the most strongly labeled, while granule cell neurons gave a faint, threshold-level reaction with the antibody. The reaction of Golgi neurons was intermediate between these two extremes. Equivalent results were obtained using two different methods of tissue preparation. Thus MAP1 appears to be a neuron-specific protein that is highly concentrated in dendrites and occurs at markedly different levels in different types of neurons. These observations provide further indications of heterogeneity among brain microtubules.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) proteins modulate heterotrimeric G protein signaling. RGS8 belongs to B/R4 subfamily of RGS proteins and is specifically expressed in Purkinje cells of adult cerebellum. Here, to examine the expression of RGS8 mRNA in developing cerebellum, we performed in situ hybridization. Apparent signals for expression of RGS8 mRNA were first detected on day 9 after birth, then RGS8 mRNA expression in Purkinje cells increased up to day 21, and its levels decreased to some extent in adult Purkinje cells. We also studied the expression of RGS7, which is expressed in Golgi cells in the granule cell layer of adult cerebellum. The expression of RGS7 mRNA was recognized in 7 day neonatal cerebellum. When examined with anti-RGS8 antibody, the RGS8 protein was already excluded from nucleus on day 9, and was distributed in cell body and dendrites in differentiating Purkinje cells of 14 day neonates.  相似文献   

12.
In addition to (i) mossy terminals, (ii) Golgi axons, (iii) granule cell dendrites and (iv), occasionally, Golgi cell dendrites, a third axonal profile identified by morphological criteria as the collateral of Purkinje axons, has been found in 2% of all cerebellar glomeruli. These infrequent components of a few glomeruli, however, were never seen in normal cerebellar cortex to establish specialized synaptic contact with glomerular dendrites. Two to four weeks after surgical isolation of the cerebellar cortex, i.e. following the destruction of both efferent and afferent fibres, the number of glomeruli containing (hypertrophic) axonal branches of Purkinje cells has increased to 13% of all surveyed glomeruli. In addition, the Purkinje axon terminals in the mossy fibre-deprived glomeruli were observed to establish numerous Gray II-type synaptic contacts with surrounding granule cell dendrites. It is suggested that the development of heterologous synapses between hypertrophic, or even intact, Purkinje axon collaterals on the one hand and the mossy fibre-vacated granule cell dendrites on the other, is a compensatory, reactive process to the synaptic "desaturation" of granule neurons, which demonstrate a dormant potential of Purkinje cells to form new synaptic contacts in the adult cerebellum.  相似文献   

13.
Monoclonal antibodies specific for unsulfated, 4-sulfated, and 6-sulfated disaccharide "stubs" that remain attached to the core protein after chondroitinase ABC digestion of chondroitin/dermatan sulfate proteoglycans have been used to study the localization of chondroitin and the two isomeric chondroitin sulfates in developing rat cerebellum. At 1-2 weeks postnatal, unsulfated chondroitin is present in the granule cell layer, molecular layer, and prospective white matter, but there was no staining of the external granule cell layer other than light staining of Bergmann glia fibers. By 3 weeks postnatal, staining of the molecular layer has disappeared and has diminished in the white matter, whereas in adult cerebellum only the granule cell layer remains stained. The staining pattern of chondroitin 4-sulfate is similar to that for chondroitin at 1-2 weeks postnatal, but in contrast to chondroitin, chondroitin 4-sulfate increases in the molecular layer at 3 weeks, and this becomes the most densely stained region of adult cerebellum. Chondroitin 6-sulfate is present predominantly in the prospective white matter of 1-2 week postnatal cerebellum, although significant staining of the granule cell layer is also seen. By 3 weeks postnatal the granule cell staining of chondroitin 6-sulfate has decreased, and in adult cerebellum staining is seen only in the white matter and to a lesser extent in the granule cell layer. Electron microscopy confirmed the presence of chondroitin sulfate in the cytoplasm of neurons and glia of adult brain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We report the molecular cloning of one novel cDNA isolated from the rat brain. We have named the putative protein CLRP, for complex leucine-repeat protein. The predicted CLRP amino acid sequence shares homology in the amino acid composition with the Galactose, N-Acetylglucosamine, and Sialic acid transporters, and shows 91% identity with the sequence of one human chromosome 5 BAC clone. Expression of the CLRP cDNA tagged with GFP in COS-7 cells was found in cell organelles that resemble the Golgi apparatus of the cytoplasm. In Northern blot, the CLRP probe labels a single band of 2.4 kb in the brain, kidney, lung, testis, and prostate. In the brain, CLRP mRNA is expressed by limited sets of neurons, such as the pyramidal cells of the cortex, the Purkinje cells of the cerebellum, and the motoneurons of the brainstem. In the brain, the CLRP mRNA is expressed at embryonic day 15; levels of expression are maintained until postnatal day 10 and decrease in adults. The results suggest that CLRP codes a novel member of the nucleotide-sugar family of proteins of the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

15.
The immunocytochemical distribution of glutamate dehydrogenase was studied in the cerebellum of the rat using antibodies made in rabbit and guinea pig against antigen purified from bovine liver. Antiserum was found to block partially enzymatic activity both of the purified enzyme and of extracts of the rat cerebellum. Using immunoblots of proteins of rat cerebellum, a major immunoreactive protein and several minor immunoreactive proteins were detected with antiserum. Only a single immunoreactive protein was detected using affinity-purified antibody preparations. This protein migrates with a molecular weight identical to that of the subunit of glutamate dehydrogenase. Further evidence that the antibodies were selective for glutamate dehydrogenase in rat cerebellum was obtained through peptide mapping. Purified glutamate dehydrogenase and the immunoreactive protein from rat cerebellum generated similar patterns of immunoreactive peptides. No significant cross-reaction was observed with glutamine synthetase. Immunocytochemistry was done on cryostat- and Vibratome-cut sections of the cerebellum of rats that had been perfused with cold 4% paraformaldehyde. Glial cells were found to be the most immunoreactive structures throughout the cerebellum. Most apparent was the intense labeling of Bergmann glial cell bodies and fibers. In the granule cell layer, heavy labeling of astrocytes was seen. Purkinje and granule cell bodies were only lightly immunoreactive, whereas stellate, basket, and Golgi cells were unlabeled. Labeling of presynaptic terminals was not apparent. These findings suggest that glutamate dehydrogenase, like glutamine synthetase, is enriched in glia relative to neurons.  相似文献   

16.
One aspect of integration of implanted neurons into the neuronal circuitry of a defective host brain is the re-establishment of a host-to-graft afferent innervation. We addressed this issue by using the adult cerebellum of Purkinje cell degeneration (pcd) mutant mice, which lack virtually all Purkinje cells after postnatal day (P) 45. Purkinje cells constitute one of the cerebellar cell types being innervated by axons of raphé serotonin (5-HT) neurons. In normal mice, 5-HT-immunoreactive fibers are distributed to all cerebellar folia. Following Purkinje cell loss inpcd mice, cerebellar 5-HT-immunoreactive fibers persist. Cerebellar cell suspensions were prepared from embryonic day (E) 11–13 normal mouse embryos and were intraparenchymally grafted into the cerebellum ofpcd mutants either directly or after pre-treatment with 5, 7-dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT) to selectively remove 5-HT cells of donor origin. The state of Purkinje cells and 5-HT axons was monitored in alternate sections by 28-kDa Ca2+-binding protein (CaBP) and 5-HT immunocytochemistry, respectively. Serotonin-immunoreactive axons were seen in the grafts from 5 to 32 days after transplantation. In some of the grafts which had not been pre-treated with 5,7-DHT, a small number of 5-HT-immunoreactive cell bodies was found, indicating that part of the 5-HT fiber innervation of the graft could actually derive from donor cells. On the other hand, in grafts pre-treated with 5,7-DHT, no 5-HT cell bodies were seen in the grafted cerebellum; 5-HT fibre innervation of the grafts occurred, but it appeared to be slightly less robust compared to situations of co-grafted 5-HT cell bodies. These findings suggest that host 5-HT fibers are able to provide afferent innervation to donor cerebellar tissue; the presence of co-grafted 5-HT cells may augment such an innervation.Special issue dedicated to Dr. Morris H. Aprison.  相似文献   

17.
Monospecific antibodies were prepared to a previously characterized chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan of brain and used in conjunction with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique to localize the proteoglycan by immunoelectron microscopy. The proteoglycan was found to be exclusively intracellular in adult cerebellum, cerebrum, brain stem, and spinal cord. Some neurons and astrocytes (including Golgi epithelial cells and Bergmann fibers) showed strong cytoplasmic staining. Although in the central nervous system there was heavy axoplasmic staining of many myelinated and unmyelinated fibers, not all axons stained. Staining was also seen in retinal neurons and glia (ganglion cells, horizontal cells, and Muller cells), but several central nervous tissue elements were consistently unstained, including Purkinje cells, oligodendrocytes, myelin, optic nerve axons, nerve endings, and synaptic vesicles. In sympathetic ganglion and peripheral nerve there was no staining of neuronal cell bodies, axons, myelin, or Schwann cells, but in sciatic nerve the Schwann cell basal lamina was stained, as was the extracellular matrix surrounding collagen fibrils. Staining was also observed in connective tissue surrounding the trachea and in the lacunae of tracheal hyaline cartilage. These findings are consistent with immunochemical studies demonstrating that antibodies to the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan of brain also cross-react to various degrees with certain connective tissue proteoglycans.  相似文献   

18.
During development, growing axons must locate target cells to form synapses. This is not easy, since target cells are also growing and even actively migrating. In some brain regions, such axons have been reported to wait for the timing when target cells become mature, without invading their target region. However, in the cerebellum climbing fibers (CFs), major afferent axons, arrive near their target neurons, Purkinje cells, when the neurons are still actively migrating. We, therefore, examined whether synaptic contacts are established at such early stages. To specifically label CFs, we introduced by in utero electroporation a mixture of genes encoding for Ptf1a‐enhancer‐driven Cre recombinase and Cre‐dependent fluorescent protein into the mouse hindbrain at embryonic day (E) 10.5 and observed them during development. The earliest stages at which labeled CFs were observed in the cerebellar primordium were E15.5–E16.5. These fibers were fasciculated in the dorsal region and entered the cerebellar primordium. Some fibers defasciculated and reached the caudal region. At E17.5 and E18.5, fasciculated fibers were also found in the mantle region, and some grew toward the surface of the primordium to penetrate a mass of Purkinje cells. Interestingly, as early as E16.5, labeled fibers were found to run in close apposition to Purkinje cell dendrites and to express a presynaptic marker. These observations suggest that CFs form synapses with Purkinje cells as soon as the fibers enter the cerebellum. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 75: 927–934, 2015  相似文献   

19.
We report the molecular cloning of one novel cDNA isolated from the rat brain. We have named the putative protein CLRP, for complex leucine‐repeat protein. The predicted CLRP amino acid sequence shares homology in the amino acid composition with the Galactose, N‐Acetylglucosamine, and Sialic acid transporters, and shows 91% identity with the sequence of one human chromosome 5 BAC clone. Expression of the CLRP cDNA tagged with GFP in COS‐7 cells was found in cell organelles that resemble the Golgi apparatus of the cytoplasm. In Northern blot, the CLRP probe labels a single band of 2.4 kb in the brain, kidney, lung, testis, and prostate. In the brain, CLRP mRNA is expressed by limited sets of neurons, such as the pyramidal cells of the cortex, the Purkinje cells of the cerebellum, and the motoneurons of the brainstem. In the brain, the CLRP mRNA is expressed at embryonic day 15; levels of expression are maintained until postnatal day 10 and decrease in adults. The results suggest that CLRP codes a novel member of the nucleotide–sugar family of proteins of the Golgi apparatus. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 52: 166–173, 2002  相似文献   

20.
Altered Ontogenesis of Muscarinic Receptors in Agranular Cerebellar Cortex   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0  
Abstract: The developmental pattern, the agonist binding properties and the cellular origin(s) of muscarinic binding sites were investigated in agranular cerebellum of x-irradiated rats, of Gunn rats with hereditary hyperbilirubinemia, and of staggerer mutant mice. The density of muscarinic binding sites was found to be higher than normal in all of these cerebellar types, indicating that granular neurons do not greatly contribute to binding of acetylcholine in the rodent cerebellum. The total number of muscarinic binding sites as measured by binding of [3H]4NMPB remains unchanged in the agranular cerebellum of x-irradiated rats. However, the number of muscarinic sites is reduced by about 30% in the agranular cerebellum of homozygous Gunn rats (jj), in which fibrous astrocytes and Purkinje cells are also damaged. In the cerebellum of staggerer mice (sg/sg), where a cascade of events leads to massive damage to mossy fibers and Golgi cells in addition to granular neurons and Purkinje cells, the content of muscarinic receptors is reduced by 50%. Thus, the number of muscarinic binding sites in the rodent cerebellum seems to depend on the integrity of the additional cell types and cellular elements, damaged in these agranular models. The ontogenetic variations in the affinity of cerebellar muscarinic sites for binding of carbamylcholine in normal and Gunn rat cerebellum were compared with those observed in x-irradiated and staggerer cerebellum, where elimination of granular neurons induces the formation of ‘heterologous’ synapses. Muscarinic binding affinity increases 10-fold during postnatal development in the cerebellum of normal and Gunn rats. In the immature x-irradiated cerebellum, the affinity of muscarinic binding sites was found to be nearly as high as that detected in the adult normal cerebellum. In contrast, cerebella of 5-month-old staggerer mice display 5-fold lower affinity than their normal counterpart values, as low as that determined in normal immature cerebellum. The characteristic ontogenetic pattern of muscarink binding is therefore indicated to be related to the formation of correct circuitry, but not to the presence of granular neurons, in the developing rat cerebellum.  相似文献   

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