首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Human natural killer antigen-1 (HNK-1) is a carbohydrate epitope associated with sulfoglucuronylglycolipids and glycoproteins. Biochemical analyses have demonstrated associations between the HNK-1 epitope and isoforms of the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) family. In the cerebellum, HNK-1 is prominently expressed in Purkinje cell dendrites and Golgi cells. Purkinje cell expression of HNK-1 reveals an array of parasagittal stripes and transverse zones. Interestingly, the parasagittal expression pattern of HNK-1 is different from those reported with several other markers such as zebrin II/aldolase C and the small heat shock protein HSP25. N-CAM null knockout mice were used to explore the possible role of the HNK-1/N-CAM interaction during the topographical organization of the cerebellar cortex. N-CAM null mice have no N-CAM immunoreactivity but otherwise the cerebellum appears morphologically normal. Further, in the N-CAM null HNK-1 immunoreactivity is abolished from Purkinje cell dendrites but is retained on Golgi cells and neurons of the cerebellar nuclei. Despite the absence of N-CAM/HNK-1, parasagittal stripes and transverse zones in the cerebellum as revealed by using zebrin II immunocytochemistry appear normal.  相似文献   

2.
The cytoarchitecture of the cerebellum has been studied in chicken embryos from day 3-20 using serial sections stained with cresylviolet, haematoxylin-eosin and toluidine blue. Three periods have been distinguished in cerebellar development on a basis of cytoarchitectonic characteristics. Of these periods the middle one, which lasts from the 8th to the 15th day, is marked by two subsequent transient longitudinal cytoarchitectonic patterns in the cortical anlage. The first pattern, which exists between days 8 and 11, consists of 4 longitudinal Purkinje cell clusters (of the first order) at either side of the midline. The second pattern, which is most distinct and complete during embryonic days 12-14, is caused by specific localizations of otherwise few, early inwardly migrating granule cells from the external cerebellar matrix (so-called granule raphes), which pass through the layer of Purkinje cell clusters of the first order and thus subdivide these latter into smaller entities: Purkinje cell clusters of the second order. The number of these latter (6 or 7 and 11 or 12 in the anterior and posterior lobes, respectively) correspond to the number of parasagittal modules, which can be discerned on a basis of the organization of fiber connections of the adult cerebellar cortex. Thanks to this similarity various hypotheses can be formulated concerning the significance of the transient cytoarchitectonic patterns in the primitive cortex for the genesis of the modular organization of the cerebellum.  相似文献   

3.
The adult cerebellar cortex is comprised of reproducible arrays of transverse zones and parasagittal stripes of Purkinje cells. Adult stripes are created through the perinatal rostrocaudal dispersion of embryonic Purkinje cell clusters, triggered by signaling through the Reelin pathway. Reelin is secreted by neurons in the external granular layer and deep cerebellar nuclei and binds to two high affinity extracellular receptors on Purkinje cells-the Very low density lipoprotein receptor (Vldlr) and apolipoprotein E receptor 2 (Apoer2). In mice null for either Reelin or double null for Vldlr and Apoer2, Purkinje cell clusters fail to disperse. Here we report that animals null for either Vldlr or Apoer2 individually, exhibit specific and parasagittally-restricted Purkinje cell ectopias. For example, in mice lacking Apoer2 function immunostaining reveals ectopic Purkinje cells that are largely restricted to the zebrin II-immunonegative population of the anterior vermis. In contrast, mice null for Vldlr have a much larger population of ectopic Purkinje cells that includes members from both the zebrin II-immunonegative and -immunopositive phenotypes. HSP25 immunoreactivity reveals that in Vldlr null animals a large portion of zebrin II-immunopositive ectopic cells are probably destined to become stripes in the central zone (lobules VI-VII). A small population of ectopic zebrin II-immunonegative Purkinje cells is also observed in animals heterozygous for both receptors (Apoer2(+/-): Vldlr(+/-)), but no ectopia is present in mice heterozygous for either receptor alone. These results indicate that Apoer2 and Vldlr coordinate the dispersal of distinct, but overlapping subsets of Purkinje cells in the developing cerebellum.  相似文献   

4.
The Acp2 gene encodes the beta subunit of lysosomal acid phosphatase, which is an isoenzyme that hydrolyzes orthophosphoric monoesters. In mice, a spontaneous mutation in Acp2 results in severe cerebellar defects. These include a reduced size, abnormal lobulation, and an apparent anterior cerebellar disorder with an absent or hypoplastic vermis. Based on differential gene expression in the cerebellum, the mouse cerebellar cortex can normally be compartmentalized anteroposteriorly into four transverse zones and mediolaterally into parasagittal stripes. In this study, immunohistochemistry was performed using various Purkinje cell compartmentation markers to examine their expression patterns in the Acp2 mutant. Despite the abnormal lobulation and anterior cerebellar defects, zebrin II and PLCβ4 showed similar expression patterns in the nax mutant and wild type cerebellum. However, fewer stripes were found in the anterior zone of the nax mutant, which could be due to a lack of Purkinje cells or altered expression of the stripe markers. HSP25 expression was uniform in the central zone of the nax mutant cerebellum at around postnatal day (P) 18–19, suggesting that HSP25 immunonegative Purkinje cells are absent or delayed in stripe pattern expression compared to the wild type. HSP25 expression became heterogeneous around P22–23, with twice the number of parasagittal stripes in the nax mutant compared to the wild type. Aside from reduced size and cortical disorganization, both the posterior zone and nodular zone in the nax mutant appeared less abnormal than the rest of the cerebellum. From these results, it is evident that the anterior zone of the nax mutant cerebellum is the most severely affected, and this extends beyond the primary fissure into the rostral central zone/vermis. This suggests that ACP2 has critical roles in the development of the anterior cerebellum and it may regulate anterior and central zone compartmentation.  相似文献   

5.
Pax6 has been implicated in cerebellar granule cell development, however the neonatal lethality of the Sey/Sey mutant has precluded a more detailed study of this late developing neuronal type. In this study we use experimental mouse chimeras made from wildtype and Pax6-null embryos to circumvent early lethality and assess the developmental potential of mutant cells in the construction of the cerebellum. We have identified the granule cell as a direct target of mutant gene action, with glia and Purkinje cells being affected in what is largely a non-cell autonomous manner.Most dramatically, in postnatal day 21 (P21) chimeras, mutant cells are largely absent in the anterior and posterior cerebellum while present in central lobules, but amidst disorganized cerebellar architecture. Analysis of P0/1 and P10 chimeras demonstrates a profound temporally based defect where mutant cells colonize the anterior and posterior EGL but fail to migrate to the IGL. Mutant granule cells in the central lobules can reach the IGL in an abnormal manner, with large streams of cells forming raphes through the molecular layer.These studies provide new insights into the role of Pax6 in postnatal cerebellar development that pinpoint the granule cell as an intrinsic target of the mutant gene and key events in the life of the developing granule cell that depend upon normal Pax6 expression.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Olivo- and spinocerebellar maps in the adult cerebellum of small rodents are discontinuous, with sharp boundaries. Cortical Purkinje cells constitute a heterogeneous population, organized into parasagittal, mutually exclusive compartments. The boundaries of the intrinsic cortical compartments and those of the projectional maps are congruent. During development; (i) The incoming olivary fibres, once they penetrate in the cerebellar parenchyma, are attracted toward their ultimate terminal fields, without passing through a stage of random dispersion. (ii) Migrating Purkinje cells and inferior olivary neurons begin, asynchronously, to express cellular markers in an independent manner, giving rise to a transient compartmentation of the cerebellar cortex and the inferior olivary complex respectively. In both instances, the biochemical heterogeneity disappears during the first postnatal week, simultaneously with the acquisition of adult-like cerebellar maps. (iii) The formation of the maps is an early event, prior to the establishment of the synaptology of the cerebellar cortical circuitry. Moreover, the organization of the spinocerebellar projection in adult mutant mice does not depend on the presence of granule cells (staggerer) but on the presence of normal Purkinje cells (weaver), indicating that synaptogenesis with their target neurons is not involved in the process of map formation. The matching of region specific chemical labels between incoming afferent fibres and heterogeneous sets of Purkinje cells is the most appealing mechanism for the formation of cerebellar maps.  相似文献   

8.
The localization of alpha-D-mannosidase in the rat cerebellum was studied by using indirect immunohistochemistry at both optical and electron microscopic levels. In the adult the enzyme is particularly concentrated in the dendrites and cell bodies of Purkinje cells, basket cells, and Golgi neurons in the cerebellar cortex and in the cytoplasm and dendrites of deep nuclei neurons. The cytoplasm of granule cells is poorly stained, whereas parallel fibers, white matter, Bergman fibers, and Golgi epitheloid cell perikarya show virtually no staining. Electron microscopy suggests that most of the staining is found in the cytosol, although some staining is found in the postsynaptic densities of the synapses between parallel fibers and Purkinje dendrites. The pattern of staining was followed throughout the postnatal development of the rat cerebellum. At bith an intense and diffuse staining is found in all cells except those of the external germinative layer. At the 6th postnatal day, Purkinje cell bodies and apical cones are strongly labeled. From the 13th day on the pattern is very similar to that found in the adult. However, at the 18th postnatal day (when compared with the other structures), the staining of Purkinje cell dendrites seems to be higher than at all other ages. These data are correlated with biochemical studies and discussed in relation to the possible role of this enzyme during the postnatal development of the rat cerebellum.  相似文献   

9.
Since testicular orphan nuclear receptor 4 (TR4) was cloned, its physiological function has remained largely unknown. Throughout postnatal development, TR4-knockout (TR4-/-) mice exhibited behavioral deficits in motor coordination, suggesting impaired cerebellar function. Histological examination of the postnatal TR4-/- cerebellum revealed gross abnormalities in foliation; specifically, lobule VII in the anterior vermis was missing. Further analyses demonstrated that the laminations of the TR4-/- cerebellar cortex were changed, including reductions in the thickness of the molecular layer and the internal granule layer, as well as delayed disappearance of the external granule cell layer (EGL). These lamination irregularities may result from interference with granule cell proliferation within the EGL, delayed inward migration of postmitotic granule cells, and a higher incidence of apoptotis. In addition, abnormal development of Purkinje cells was observed in the postnatal TR4-/- cerebellum, as evidenced by aberrant dendritic arborization and reduced calbindin staining intensity. Expression of Pax-6, Sonic Hedgehog (Shh), astrotactin (Astn), reelin, and Cdk-5, genes correlated with the morphological development of the cerebellum, is reduced in the developing TR4-/- cerebellum. Together, our findings suggest that TR4 is required for normal cerebellar development.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Newborn rats were treated at different stages of their development with low doses of methylazoxymethanol acetate. The postnatal increase of the DNA content of the cerebrum did not differ from that of controls. In the cerebellum, the DNA content was transitorily reduced, but later, the external granular layer became thicker and DNA deposition increased in comparison with controls; finally, the cerebellar DNA returned to a normal value. Morphological abnormalities of the cerebellum, abnormal orientation of migrating cells, scattering of Purkinje cell bodies within the internal granule cells and specially striking abnormalities of the morphology and orientation of Purkinje cell dendrites were noted in rats treated with MAM from birth to day 3. The effects on the Purkinje cell morphogenesis persisted but were much less marked when MAM was given from 4 to 7 or from 8 to 11 days. Neonatal thyroid deficiency, as MAM-treatment between days 0 and 3, leads to an abnormal position of Purkinje cell bodies within the cerebellar cortex; it also leads to morphological abnormalities of their dendritic arborization which closely resemble those observed after MAM-treatment during the second postnatal week. It also alters the cell formation in the cerebellum. Thyroid deficiency probably exerts its effect on cell formation earlier than previous biochemical studies have shown. On another hand, the morphological abnormalities of Purkinje cell arborizations in the thyroid-deficient animals may be partly due to the perturbations of cell formation which persist later in the cerebellum.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract: Antiserum against purified rat brain hexokinase (ATP: D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.1) has been used in a study of the distribution of hexokinase during the postnatal development of rat cerebellum and retina. The cells of the external germinal layer of the cerebellum exhibit little or no fluorescence. The Purkinje cells exhibit a transient increase in hexokinase levels between 2 and 8 days postnatally, followed by a precipitous decrease (8–12 days) to the relatively low levels found in the mature Purkinje cell. Development of the intensely fluorescent cerebellar glomeruli in the granule cell layer is readily followed during the 3rd and 4th weeks postnatally. With respect to postnatal changes in hexokinase distribution of the retina, perhaps most notable is the observation that even the cytoplasmic protrusions which represent the precursors of the photoreceptor segments are richly endowed with hexokinase. Biochemical differentiation of the photoreceptor segments into hexokinase-rich inner segments and hexokinase-poor outer segments is readily observed long before the growth of the photoreceptor segments has been completed.  相似文献   

13.
The cerebellum is important for the integration of sensory perception and motor control, but its structure has mostly been studied in mammals. Here, we describe the cell types and neural tracts of the adult zebrafish cerebellum using molecular markers and transgenic lines. Cerebellar neurons are categorized to two major groups: GABAergic and glutamatergic neurons. The Purkinje cells, which are GABAergic neurons, express parvalbumin7, carbonic anhydrase 8, and aldolase C like (zebrin II). The glutamatergic neurons are vglut1+ granule cells and vglut2high cells, which receive Purkinje cell inputs; some vglut2high cells are eurydendroid cells, which are equivalent to the mammalian deep cerebellar nuclei. We found olig2+ neurons in the adult cerebellum and ascertained that at least some of them are eurydendroid cells. We identified markers for climbing and mossy afferent fibers, efferent fibers, and parallel fibers from granule cells. Furthermore, we found that the cerebellum-like structures in the optic tectum and antero-dorsal hindbrain show similar Parvalbumin7 and Vglut1 expression profiles as the cerebellum. The differentiation of GABAergic and glutamatergic neurons begins 3 days post-fertilization (dpf), and layers are first detectable 5 dpf. Using anti-Parvalbumin7 and Vglut1 antibodies to label Purkinje cells and granule cell axons, respectively, we screened for mutations affecting cerebellar neuronal development and the formation of neural tracts. Our data provide a platform for future studies of zebrafish cerebellar development.  相似文献   

14.
The cerebellum is a highly conserved structure which exhibits patterns of gene expression and axonal connections that are organized into parasagittal domains. These aspects of the mature cerebellum are presaged during embryonic development by the expression patterns of vertebrate homologs of Drosophila segmentation genes. We wished to determine whether the parasagittal domains of gene expression are compartments of lineage restriction. To this end, a clonal analysis of the chick cerebellum was conducted with a complex retroviral library. From embryonic day (E) 8 to E12, clones derived from the more medial portion of the cerebellar ventricular zone (VZ) were observed to spread preferentially in the mediolateral direction, crossing the boundaries of the parasagittal domains of gene expression. In late embryonic and posthatch periods, VZ clones were found to comprise Purkinje cells, glial cells, or both types of cells. At these later times, clonally related glial cells formed tight parasagittal clusters, while clonally related Purkinje cells were scattered extensively in the anteroposterior direction. We propose that a subset of the cerebellar VZ clones, those with medial origins, undergoes a biphasic dispersion: an early phase of mediolateral dispersion and a late phase of anteroposterior dispersion. This novel pattern of clonal dispersion suggests that the cerebellar VZ is not partitioned into parasagittal domains of lineage restriction. It leaves open the possibility that the later dispersion along the anteroposterior axis results from the parasagittal patterns of gene expression in the developing cerebellar cortex.  相似文献   

15.
Recent progress in the comparative analysis of the vertebrate cerebellar organization shows that the cerebella of different tetrapods have a basically similar intrinsic organization, whereas the cerebellum of fishes displays a number of fundamental differences in this respect. Clear examples of teleostean cerebellar specializations are present in the gigantocerebellum of mormyrids, including a valvula cerebelli, the absence of a parasagittal zonal organization, the presence of eurydendroid projection neurons instead of deep cerebellar nuclei, a precerebellar nucleus lateralis valvulae, olivocerebellar fibers that do not climb into the molecular layer, uni- and bilateral locations of granule cells, parallel fibers without a T-shaped bifurcation and with a coextensive distribution in the transverse plane, and different Purkinje cell arrangements including a dendritic palisade pattern. A theoretical exploration of the possible significance of these configurations suggests that they all might be involved in a single main cerebellar function, i.e. coincidence detection of parallel fiber activity by Purkinje cells.  相似文献   

16.
Glutamate transport is a primary mechanism for regulating extracellular levels of glutamate in the central nervous system. GLT1, the most abundant of the known high‐affinity glutamate transporters, is found exclusively in astrocytes in adult brain of several species, but we and others have recently identified neurons that transiently express GLT1 protein in the developing brain. We now demonstrate the development of cell type specificity for GLT1 expression at 60, 71, and 136 days' gestation in the developing sheep brain (term = 145 days). At 60 and 71 days of gestation, GLT1 colocalizes with calbindin in Purkinje cells in the cerebellum, and this expression pattern has a novel distribution that is reminiscent of the parasagittal zebrin‐like bands. GLT1 immunoreactivity simultaneously occurs in periventricular white matter, anterior commissure, and striatal white matter, dissipating by 136 days. GLT1 protein expression within astrocytes is developmentally regulated, appearing first in vimentin positive radial glia at 60 and 71 days and then switching to GFAP positive parenchymal and perivascular astrocytes at 136 days. Expression of GLT1 in subsets of vimentin‐positive astrocytes persists in white matter but not in cortex. These results identify a novel compartmentation within cerebellar cortex and neuronal and axonal pathway localization of GLT1, suggesting the participation of this glutamate transporter in the development of the topographic organization of cerebellar cortex and a transient neuronal function for GLT1 in developing brain. In addition, GLT1 expression is highly plastic, being neither exclusively astroglial nor uniformly expressed in different populations of astrocytes during brain development. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 39: 515–526, 1999  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Dendrite arborization patterns are critical determinants of neuronal connectivity and integration. Planar and highly branched dendrites of the cerebellar Purkinje cell receive specific topographical projections from two major afferent pathways; a single climbing fiber axon from the inferior olive that extend along Purkinje dendrites, and parallel fiber axons of granule cells that contact vertically to the plane of dendrites. It has been believed that murine Purkinje cell dendrites extend in a single parasagittal plane in the molecular layer after the cell polarity is determined during the early postnatal development. By three-dimensional confocal analysis of growing Purkinje cells, we observed that mouse Purkinje cells underwent dynamic dendritic remodeling during circuit maturation in the third postnatal week. After dendrites were polarized and flattened in the early second postnatal week, dendritic arbors gradually expanded in multiple sagittal planes in the molecular layer by intensive growth and branching by the third postnatal week. Dendrites then became confined to a single plane in the fourth postnatal week. Multiplanar Purkinje cells in the third week were often associated by ectopic climbing fibers innervating nearby Purkinje cells in distinct sagittal planes. The mature monoplanar arborization was disrupted in mutant mice with abnormal Purkinje cell connectivity and motor discoordination. The dendrite remodeling was also impaired by pharmacological disruption of normal afferent activity during the second or third postnatal week. Our results suggest that the monoplanar arborization of Purkinje cells is coupled with functional development of the cerebellar circuitry.  相似文献   

19.
Cerebellar granule neurons migrate from the external granule cell layer (EGL) to the internal granule cell layer (IGL) during postnatal morphogenesis. This migration process through 4 different layers is a complex mechanism which is highly regulated by many secreted proteins. Although chemokines are well-known peptides that trigger cell migration, but with the exception of CXCL12, which is responsible for prenatal EGL formation, their functions have not been thoroughly studied in granule cell migration. In the present study, we examined cerebellar CXCL14 expression in neonatal and adult mice. CXCL14 mRNA was expressed at high levels in adult mouse cerebellum, but the protein was not detected. Nevertheless, Western blotting analysis revealed transient expression of CXCL14 in the cerebellum in early postnatal days (P1, P8), prior to the completion of granule cell migration. Looking at the distribution of CXCL14 by immunohistochemistry revealed a strong immune reactivity at the level of the Purkinje cell layer and molecular layer which was absent in the adult cerebellum. In functional assays, CXCL14 stimulated transwell migration of cultured granule cells and enhanced the spreading rate of neurons from EGL microexplants. Taken together, these results revealed the transient expression of CXCL14 by Purkinje cells in the developing cerebellum and demonstrate the ability of the chemokine to stimulate granule cell migration, suggesting that it must be involved in the postnatal maturation of the cerebellum.  相似文献   

20.
F3/contactin (CNTN1) and TAG-1 (CNTN2) are closely related axonal glycoproteins that are differentially regulated during development. In the cerebellar cortex TAG-1 is expressed first as granule cell progenitors differentiate in the premigratory zone of the external germinal layer. However, as these cells begin radial migration, TAG-1 is replaced by F3/contactin. To address the significance of this differential regulation, we have generated transgenic mice in which F3/contactin expression is driven by TAG-1 gene regulatory sequences, which results in premature expression of F3/contactin in granule cells. These animals (TAG/F3 mice) display a developmentally regulated cerebellar phenotype in which the size of the cerebellum is markedly reduced during the first two postnatal weeks but subsequently recovers. This is due in part to a reduction in the number of granule cells, most evident in the external germinal layer at postnatal day 3 and in the inner granular layer between postnatal days 8 and 11. The reduction in granule cell number is accompanied by a decrease in precursor granule cell proliferation at postnatal day 3, followed by an increase in the number of cycling cells at postnatal day 8. In the same developmental window the size of the molecular layer is markedly reduced and Purkinje cell dendrites fail to elaborate normally. These data are consistent with a model in which deployment of F3/contactin on granule cells affects proliferation and differentiation of these neurons as well as the differentiation of their synaptic partners, the Purkinje cells. Together, these findings indicate that precise spatio-temporal regulation of TAG-1 and F3/contactin expression is critical for normal cerebellar morphogenesis.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号