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1.
Brain development and function relies on the exchange of signals between neurons and glial cells. Here we review a series of recent studies on cultures of purified retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) that point to a new role of glial cells in the formation and plasticity of synaptic connections. The results suggest that neurons must import glia-derived cholesterol via lipoproteins to form numerous and efficient synaptic connections. This finding may explain why throughout the central nervous system (CNS) the main phase of synaptogenesis starts synchronously after glia differentiation and why astrocytes produce apolipoprotein E (apoE) and cholesterol-containing lipoproteins. Experimental tests of these hypotheses may further our understanding of the cholesterol metabolism in the brain and may help to explain neurologic symptoms resulting from defective cholesterol and lipoprotein metabolism.  相似文献   

2.
Glial cells are not passive spectators during nervous system assembly, rather they are active participants that exert significant control over neuronal development. Well-established roles for glia in shaping the developing nervous system include providing trophic support to neurons, modulating axon pathfinding, and driving nerve fasciculation. Exciting recent studies have revealed additional ways in which glial cells also modulate neurodevelopment. Glial cells regulate the number of neurons at early developmental stages by dynamically influencing neural precursor divisions, and at later stages by promoting neuronal cell death through engulfment. Glia also participate in the fine sculpting of neuronal connections by pruning excess axonal projections, shaping dendritic spines, and secreting multiple factors that promote synapse formation and functional maturation. These recent insights provide further compelling evidence that glial cells, through their diverse cellular actions, are essential contributors to the construction of a functionally mature nervous system.  相似文献   

3.
Olfactory ensheathing cells: their role in central nervous system repair   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The olfactory system is an unusual tissue in that it can support neurogenesis throughout life; permitting the in-growth and synapse formation of olfactory receptor axons into the central nervous system (CNS) environment of the olfactory bulb. It is thought that this unusual property is in part due to the olfactory glial cells, termed olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs), but also due to neuronal stem cells. These glial cells originate from the olfactory placode and possess many properties in common with the glial cells from the peripheral nervous system (PNS), Schwann cells. Recent data has suggested that olfactory ensheathing cells are a distinct glial cell type and possess properties, which might make them more suitable for transplant-mediated repair of central nervous system injury models. This paper reviews the biological properties of these cells and illustrates their use in central nervous system repair.  相似文献   

4.
《Developmental biology》1997,191(1):118-130
Glial cell differentiation inDrosophila melanogasterrequires the activity ofglide/gcm(glial cell deficient/glial cell missing). The role of this gene is to direct the cell fate switch between neurons and glial cells by activating the glial developmental program in multipotent precursor cells of the nervous system. In this paper, we show thatglide/gcmis also expressed and required in the lineage of hemocytes/macrophages, scavenger cells that phagocytose cells undergoing programmed cell death. In addition, we show that, as for glial cells,glide/gcmplays an instructive role in hemocyte differentiation. Interestingly, it has been shown that in the development of the fly adult nervous system the role of scavenger cells is played by glial cells. These data and our findings on the dual role ofglide/gcmindicate that glial cells and hemocytes/macrophages are functionally and molecularly related.  相似文献   

5.
The functional and structural integrity of the nervous system depends on the coordinated action of neurons and glial cells. Phenomena like synaptic activity, conduction of action potentials, and neuronal growth and regeneration, to name a few, are fine tuned by glial cells. Furthermore, the active role of glial cells in the regulation of neuronal functions is underscored by several conditions in which specific mutation affecting the glia results in axonal dysfunction. We have shown that Schwann cells (SCs), the peripheral nervous system glia, supply axons with ribosomes, and since proteins underlie cellular programs or functions, this dependence of axons from glial cells provides a new and unexplored dimension to our understanding of the nervous system. Recent evidence has now established a new modality of intercellular communication through extracellular vesicles. We have already shown that SC-derived extracellular vesicles known as exosomes enhance axonal regeneration, and increase neuronal survival after pro-degenerative stimuli. Therefore, the biology nervous system will have to be reformulated to include that the phenotype of a nerve cell results from the contribution of two nuclei, with enormous significance for the understanding of the nervous system in health and disease.  相似文献   

6.
Repairing trauma to the central nervous system by replacement of glial support cells is an increasingly attractive therapeutic strategy. We have focused on the less-studied replacement of astrocytes, the major support cell in the central nervous system, by generating astrocytes from embryonic human glial precursor cells using two different astrocyte differentiation inducing factors. The resulting astrocytes differed in expression of multiple proteins thought to either promote or inhibit central nervous system homeostasis and regeneration. When transplanted into acute transection injuries of the adult rat spinal cord, astrocytes generated by exposing human glial precursor cells to bone morphogenetic protein promoted significant recovery of volitional foot placement, axonal growth and notably robust increases in neuronal survival in multiple spinal cord laminae. In marked contrast, human glial precursor cells and astrocytes generated from these cells by exposure to ciliary neurotrophic factor both failed to promote significant behavioral recovery or similarly robust neuronal survival and support of axon growth at sites of injury. Our studies thus demonstrate functional differences between human astrocyte populations and suggest that pre-differentiation of precursor cells into a specific astrocyte subtype is required to optimize astrocyte replacement therapies. To our knowledge, this study is the first to show functional differences in ability to promote repair of the injured adult central nervous system between two distinct subtypes of human astrocytes derived from a common fetal glial precursor population. These findings are consistent with our previous studies of transplanting specific subtypes of rodent glial precursor derived astrocytes into sites of spinal cord injury, and indicate a remarkable conservation from rat to human of functional differences between astrocyte subtypes. In addition, our studies provide a specific population of human astrocytes that appears to be particularly suitable for further development towards clinical application in treating the traumatically injured or diseased human central nervous system.  相似文献   

7.
The evolutionary conservation of glial cells has been appreciated since Ramon y Cajal and Del Rio Hortega first described the morphological features of cells in the nervous system. We now appreciate that glial cells have essential roles throughout life in most nervous systems. The field of glial cell biology has grown exponentially in the last ten years. This new wealth of knowledge has been aided by seminal findings in non-mammalian model systems. Ultimately, such concepts help us to understand glia in mammalian nervous systems. Rather than summarizing the field of glial biology, I will first briefly introduce glia in non-mammalian models systems. Then, highlight seminal findings across the glial field that utilized non-mammalian model systems to advance our understanding of the mammalian nervous system. Finally, I will call attention to some recent findings that introduce new questions about glial cell biology that will be investigated for years to come.  相似文献   

8.
Glial cells   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
The nervous system is built from two broad categories of cells, neurones and glial cells. The glial cells outnumber the neurones and the two cell types occupy a comparable amount of space in nervous tissue. The main glial cell types are, in the central nervous system, astrocytes and oligodendrocytes and, in the peripheral nervous system, Schwann cells, enteric glial cells and satellite cells. In the embryo, glial cells form a cellular framework that permits the development of the rest of the nervous system, and regulate neuronal survival and differentiation. The best known function of glia in the adult is the formation of myelin sheaths around axons thus allowing the fast conduction of signalling essential for nervous system function. Glia also maintain appropriate concentrations of ions and neurotransmitters in the neuronal environment. Increasing body of evidence indicates that glial cells are essential regulators of the formation, maintenance and function of synapses, the key functional unit of the nervous system.  相似文献   

9.
Glial cells in the central nervous system(CNS) consist of a heterogeneous population of cell types,each characterized by distinct morphological features,physiological properties,and specific markers.In contrast to the previous view that glial cells were passive elements in the brain,accumulating evidence suggests that glial cells are active participants in various brain functions and brain disorders.This review summarizes recent progress of glial cell studies from several groups in China,ranging from studie...  相似文献   

10.
Davies AM 《The EMBO journal》2003,22(11):2537-2545
Cell death is a prominent feature of the developing vertebrate nervous system, affecting neurons, glial cells and their progenitors. The most extensively studied and best understood phase of cell death occurs in populations of neurons shortly after they begin establishing connections with other neurons and/or non-neural tissues. This phase of cell death makes appropriate adjustments to the relative sizes of interconnected groups of neurons and matches the size of neuronal populations that innervate non-neural tissues to the optimal requirements of these tissues. The fate of neurons during this period of development is regulated by a variety of secreted proteins that either promote survival or bring about cell death after binding to receptors expressed on the neurons. These proteins may be derived from the targets the neurons innervate, the afferents they receive or from associated glial cells, or they may be secreted by the neurons themselves. In this review, I will outline the established and emerging principles that modulate neuronal number in the developing nervous system.  相似文献   

11.
There is a growing recognition, stemming from work with both vertebrates and invertebrates, that the capacity for neuronal regeneration is critically dependent on the local microenvironment. That environment is largely created by the non-neuronal elements of the nervous system, the neuroglia. Therefore an understanding of how glial cells respond to injury is crucial to understanding neuronal regeneration. Here we examine the process of repair in a relatively simple nervous system, that of the insect, in which it is possible to define precisely the cellular events of the repair process. This repair is rapid and well organised; it involves the recruitment of blood cells, the division of endogenous glial elements and, possibly, migration from pre-existing glial pools in adjacent ganglia. There are clear parallels between the events of repair and those of normal glial development. It seems likely that the ability of the insect central nervous system to repair resides in the retention of developmental capacities throughout its life and that damage results in the activation of this potential.  相似文献   

12.
In the developing nervous system, building a functional neuronal network relies on coordinating the formation, specification and survival to diverse neuronal and glial cell subtypes. The establishment of neuronal connections further depends on sequential neuron-neuron and neuron-glia interactions that regulate cell-migration patterns and axon guidance. The visual system of Drosophila has a highly regular, retinotopic organization into reiterated interconnected synaptic circuits. It is therefore an excellent invertebrate model to investigate basic cellular strategies and molecular determinants regulating the different developmental processes that lead to network formation. Studies in the visual system have provided important insights into the mechanisms by which photoreceptor axons connect with their synaptic partners within the optic lobe. In this review, we highlight that this system is also well suited for uncovering general principles that underlie glial cell biology. We describe the glial cell subtypes in the visual system and discuss recent findings about their development and migration. Finally, we outline the pivotal roles of glial cells in mediating neural circuit assembly, boundary formation, neural proliferation and survival, as well as synaptic function.  相似文献   

13.
The nervous system consists of neurons and glial cells. Neurons generate and propagate electrical and chemical signals, whereas glia function mainly to modulate neuron function and signaling. Just as there are many different kinds of neurons with different roles, there are also many types of glia that perform diverse functions. For example, glia make myelin; modulate synapse formation, function, and elimination; regulate blood flow and metabolism; and maintain ionic and water homeostasis to name only a few. Although proteomic approaches have been used extensively to understand neurons, the same cannot be said for glia. Importantly, like neurons, glial cells have unique protein compositions that reflect their diverse functions, and these compositions can change depending on activity or disease. Here, I discuss the major classes and functions of glial cells in the central and peripheral nervous systems. I describe proteomic approaches that have been used to investigate glial cell function and composition and the experimental limitations faced by investigators working with glia.The nervous system is composed of neurons and glial cells that function together to create complex behaviors. Traditionally, glia have been considered to be merely passive contributors to brain function, resulting in a pronounced neurocentric bias among neuroscientists. Some of this bias reflects a paucity of knowledge and tools available to study glia. However, this view is rapidly changing as new tools, model systems (culture and genetic), and technologies have permitted investigators to show that glia actively sculpt and modulate neuronal properties and functions in many ways. Glia have been thought to outnumber neurons by 10:1, although more recent studies suggest the ratio in the human brain is closer to 1:1 with region-specific differences (1). There are many different types of glia, some of which are specific to the central nervous system (CNS),1 whereas others are found only in the peripheral nervous system (PNS). The main types of CNS glia include astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, ependymal cells, radial glia, and microglia. In the PNS, the main glial cells are Schwann cells, satellite cells, and enteric glia. These cells differ and are classified according to their morphologies, distinct anatomical locations in the nervous system, functions, developmental origins, and unique molecular compositions. Among the different classes of glia there are additional subclasses that reflect further degrees of specialization. In this review, I will discuss the characteristics and functions of the major glial cell types including astrocytes, microglia, and the myelin-forming oligodendrocytes (CNS) and Schwann cells (PNS). Because of space limitations, it is impossible to give a complete accounting of all glia and what is known about each of these cell types. Therefore, I encourage the interested reader to refer to some of the many excellent reviews referenced below that focus on individual glial cell types. Finally, I will discuss proteomic studies of glial cell function and some of the unique challenges investigators face when working with these cells.  相似文献   

14.
Melanocytes are pigment‐producing cells that reside in the skin, eyes, ears, heart, and central nervous system meninges of mammals. Schwann cells are glial cells, which closely associate with peripheral nerves, myelinating, and sheathing them. Melanocytes and Schwann cells both arise from the neural crest during development, and some melanocytes arise directly from Schwann cell precursors lining developing spinal nerves. In this review, we explore the connections between melanocytes and Schwann cells in development and transformation.  相似文献   

15.
By means of electron microscopy developmental dynamics of the human and mammalian innervation has been studied during prenatal period of ontogenesis. Regularities in formation of the intracardiac nervous ganglia and in differentiation of nervous-muscular connections in the myocardium have been stated. Ultrastructural peculiarities of proneuroblasts and the nervous fiber terminals, growing to differentiating cardiomyocytes have been described during the premediator stage of the vegetative nervous system development. Peculiarities of synaptogenesis have been followed, among them those demonstrated as heterochromic formation of pre- and post-synaptic membrane and as uneven accumulation of synaptic vesicles. Development of the nervous-muscular connections have been studied. At the beginning of the mediator stage of the vegetative nervous system development formation of simple contacts between the nervous terminals and cardiomyocytes is intensified, and glial tunics develop rather poorly. Therefore, at the beginning the terminal parts of axons are not surrounded with processes of gliocytes. Simultaneously, formation of small intensively luminescent cells takes place. Development of afferent nervous terminals occurs not only in the myocardium, but in the intracardiac ganglia.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Echinoderms and chordates belong to the same monophyletic taxon, the Deuterostomia. In spite of significant differences in body plan organization, the two phyla may share more common traits than was thought previously. Of particular interest are the common features in the organization of the central nervous system. The present study employs two polyclonal antisera raised against bovine Reissner's substance (RS), a secretory product produced by glial cells of the subcomissural organ, to study RS-like immunoreactivity in the central nervous system of sea cucumbers.

Results

In the ectoneural division of the nervous system, both antisera recognize the content of secretory vacuoles in the apical cytoplasm of the radial glia-like cells of the neuroepithelium and in the flattened glial cells of the non-neural epineural roof epithelium. The secreted immunopositive material seems to form a thin layer covering the cell apices. There is no accumulation of the immunoreactive material on the apical surface of the hyponeural neuroepithelium or the hyponeural roof epithelium. Besides labelling the supporting cells and flattened glial cells of the epineural roof epithelium, both anti-RS antisera reveal a previously unknown putative glial cell type within the neural parenchyma of the holothurian nervous system.

Conclusion

Our results show that: a) the glial cells of the holothurian tubular nervous system produce a material similar to Reissner's substance known to be synthesized by secretory glial cells in all chordates studied so far; b) the nervous system of sea cucumbers shows a previously unrealized complexity of glial organization. Our findings also provide significant clues for interpretation of the evolution of the nervous system in the Deuterostomia. It is suggested that echinoderms and chordates might have inherited the RS-producing radial glial cell type from the central nervous system of their common ancestor, i.e., the last common ancestor of all the Deuterostomia.  相似文献   

17.
Large numbers of different proteoglycans are expressed in tightly regulated spatio-temporal patterns by both the nerve cells (neurons) and the supporting glial cells of the nervous system. Several of these proteoglycans have been shown by studies in vitro to affect the migration of neural precursor cells, the elongation and pathfinding of neurites and the formation and stabilization of synapses. Such processes are important for the accurate wiring of the nervous system, and so it has been postulated that proteoglycans play an essential role during neural development. However, with few exceptions, the phenotypes of null mutations in mice and some human genetic diseases have provided little support for this view. Here we will review recent data from both in vitro and in vivo studies analyzing the function of proteoglycans in the nervous system in order to provide possible explanations for their apparent lack of function.  相似文献   

18.
胶质细胞是一类神经系统中区别于神经元的一大类细胞,其数量是神经元的10~50倍。而且在相当长的一段时间胶质细胞也被认为是神经系统中的一种“胶水”,仅起到黏结神经元和填充神经系统的作用。随着近几十年神经科学的发展,神经生物学家们发现,胶质细胞的功能多种多样,并参与记忆、认知、神经发育性和退行性疾病,甚至衰老等高级功能。通过PubMed查询,中国胶质细胞相关论文的十年增长率为270%,远远高于全球平均增长率140%,说明中国在胶质细胞方面的研究势头非常强劲。本期《生物化学与生物物理进展》刊出了围绕胶质细胞的20余篇论文。涵盖胶质细胞的生理功能和病理功能的各个方面。本期的刊行将有利于推动国内胶质细胞科学研究,并为中国脑计划提供参考。  相似文献   

19.
Glial cells are the most abundant cells in the human brain and have long been considered as passive supporting cells for neurons. In contrast to the extensive studies on various neuronal functions in the nervous system, we still have limited knowledge about glial cells. Recently a number of pioneering studies have provided convincing evidence that glia play active roles in development and function of the central nervous system. This review discusses recent advances in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying glial cell differentiation. We then highlight some of the novel findings about glial function, i.e. the role of glia in synaptogenesis and the intricate relationship between astrocytes and adult neural stem cells. Finally, we summarize the emerging studies that implicate abnormalities in the formation or maintenance of glia leading to severe brain diseases, such as Alexander disease, glioblastoma and multiple sclerosis, and potential therapeutic strategies to tackle these diseases.  相似文献   

20.
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