Mitotic sympathetic neuroblasts initiate axonal pathfinding in vivo. |
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Authors: | E Wolf I B Black E DiCicco-Bloom |
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Affiliation: | Department of Neuroscience and Cell Biology, UMDNJ/Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, 675 Hoes Lane, Room 338, CABM, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA. |
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Abstract: | Neuronal precursor proliferation and axodendritic outgrowth have been traditionally regarded as discrete and sequential developmental stages. However, we recently found that sympathetic neuroblasts in vitro often elaborate long neuritic processes before dividing. Furthermore, these "paramitotic" neurites were maintained during cell division and neuritic morphology was consistently preserved by daughter cells after mitosis. This inheritance of neuritic morphology in vitro raised the possibility that proliferating neuroblasts engage in axodendritic outgrowth. To determine whether mitotic superior cervical ganglion (SCG) neuroblasts are engaged in pathfinding in vivo, we have combined retrograde axonal tracing of efferent nerve trunks with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling of cells in S-phase. In fact, about 13% of BrdU(+) cells were retrogradely labeled, indicating that mitotic neuroblasts often have extraganglionic axonal projections. Moreover, the presence of axons during S-phase was observed at two developmental ages (E15.5 and E16. 5), implicating an ongoing function of paramitotic axons during neuronal ontogeny. Using a calculation to account for experimental limitations, we estimate that virtually all mitotic SCG neuroblasts have direct access to extraganglionic signals during development. We conclude that mitotic neuronal precursors in vivo engage in pathfinding, raising the possibility that interaction of proliferating populations with distant signals actively coordinates cell division and neural connectivity. |
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