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1.
During cortical development, neurons generated at the same time in the ventricular zone migrate out into the cortical plate and form a cortical layer (Berry and Eayrs, 1963, Nature 197:984–985; Berry and Rogers, 1965, J. Anat. 99:691–709). We have been studying both the formation and maintenance of cortical layers in slice cultures from rat cortex. The bromodexyuridine (BrdU) method was used to label cortical neurons on their birthday in vivo. When slice cultures were prepared from animals at different embryonic and postnatal ages, all cortical layers that have already been established in vivo remained preserved for several weeks in vitro. In slice cultures prepared during migration in the cortex, cells contiuned to migrate towards the pial side of the cortical slice, however, migration ceased after about 1 week in culture. Thus, cortical cells reached their final laminar position only in slice cultures from postnatal animals, whereas in embryonic slices, migrating cells became scattered throughout the cortex. Previous studies demonstrated that radial glia fibers are the major substrate for migrating neurons (Rakic, 1972, J. Comp. Neurol. 145:61–84; Hatten and Mason, 1990, Experientia 46:907–916). Using antibodies directed against the intermediate filament Vimentin, radial glial cells were detected in all slice cutures where cell migration did occur. Comparable to the glia development in vivo, radial glial fibers disappeared and astrocytes containing the glia fibrillary-associated protein (GFAP) differentiated in slice cultures from postnatal cortex, after the neurons have completed their migration. In contrast, radial glial cells were detected over the whole culture period, and very few astrocytes differentiated in embryonic slices, where cortical neurons failed to finish their migration. The results of this study indicate that the local environment is sufficient to sustain the layered organization of the cortex and support the migration of cortical neurons. In addition, our results reveal a close relationship between cell migration and the developmental status of glial cells. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
During cortical development, neurons generated at the same time in the ventricular zone migrate out into the cortical plate and form a cortical layer (Berry and Eayrs, 1963, Nature 197:984-985; Berry and Rogers, 1965, J. Anat. 99:691-709). We have been studying both the formation and maintenance of cortical layers in slice cultures from rat cortex. The bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) method was used to label cortical neurons on their birthday in vivo. When slice cultures were prepared from animals at different embryonic and postnatal ages, all cortical layers that have already been established in vivo remained preserved for several weeks in vitro. In slice cultures prepared during migration in the cortex, cells continued to migrate towards the pial side of the cortical slice, however, migration ceased after about 1 week in culture. Thus, cortical cells reached their final laminar position only in slice cultures from postnatal animals, whereas in embryonic slice, migrating cells became scattered throughout the cortex. Previous studies demonstrated that radial glia fibers are the major substrate for migrating neurons (Rakic, 1972, J. Comp. Neurol. 145:61-84; Hatten and Mason, 1990, Experientia 46:907-916). Using antibodies directed against the intermediate filament Vimentin, radial glial cells were detected in all slice cultures where cell migration did occur. Comparable to the glia development in vivo, radial glial fibers disappeared and astrocytes containing the glia fibrillary-associated protein (GFAP) differentiated in slice cultures from postnatal cortex, after the neurons have completed their migration. In contrast, radial glial cells were detected over the whole culture period, and very few astrocytes differentiated in embryonic slices, where cortical neurons failed to finish their migration. The results of this study indicate that the local environment is sufficient to sustain the layered organization of the cortex and support the migration of cortical neurons. In addition, our results reveal a close relationship between cell migration and the developmental status of glial cells.  相似文献   

3.
During the development of cerebral cortex, newborn pyramidal neurons originated from the ventricle wall migrate outwardly to the superficial layer of cortex under the guidance of radial glial filaments. Whether this radial migration of young neurons is guided by gradient of diffusible factors or simply driven by a mass action of newly generated neurons at the ventricular zone is entirely unknown, a potential guidance mechanism that has long been overlooked. Our recent study showed that a guidance molecule semaphorin-3A, which is expressed in descending gradient across cortical layers, may serve as a chemoattractive guidance signal for radial migration of newborn cortical neurons toward upper layers. We hypothesize the existence of four groups of extracellular factors that can guide the radial migration of young neurons: (1) attractive factors expressing in superficial layers of cortex, (2) repulsive factors enriched in the ventricular zone, (3) pro-migratory factors uniformly expressed in all cortical layers and (4) stop signals locally expressed in the outmost layer of cortex.Key words: radial migration, cortex, guidance, semaphorin, diffusible factors, growth coneThe mammalian cerebral cortex has the typical laminar structure, the formation of which is essential for neurons in each cortical layer to establish the specific input and output connections with other brain regions. The development of the cortical laminar structure is known to involve the well-coordinated radial migration of newborn pyramidal neurons during development.1 After young neurons are generated from the ventricular zone (VZ) and subventricular zone (SVZ), they leave their birthplace and migrate along radial glial filaments toward the surface of cortical plate (CP), crossing existing cortical layers composed of earlier born neurons and eventually settling down beneath the marginal zone (MZ, layer I).13 It is generally accepted that the adhesion between neurons and radial glial filaments provides the directionality for these young neurons, and the targeting of neurons to specific lamina was controlled by the selective detachment of migrating neurons from radial glial fibers upon reaching the designated cortical layer.2,3 However, we believe that the radial glial fibers can only serve as the adhesive scaffold for migrating neurons and constrain their migration in the radial dimension; it remains an open question regarding the nature of the signals that cause newborn neurons to migrate consistently outward along the fiber rather than inward. Whether the radial migration of cortical neurons is guided by gradient of diffusible factors or simply driven by a mass action of newly generated neurons at the VZ is entirely unknown, a potential guidance mechanism that has long been overlooked.Recently we found that the radial migration of layer II/III cortical neurons during development is guided by an extracellular guidance molecule semaphorin-3A (Sema3A).4 We observed that Sema3A is expressed in a descending gradient across the cortical layers, whereas its receptor neuropilin-1 (NP1) is expressed at a high level in migrating neurons. By in utero electroporation, we were able to monitor the migration of a subpopulation of cortical neurons in their native environment and examine the effect of perturbing Sema3A signaling. We found that downregulation or conditional knockout of NP1 in young neurons impeded their radial migration with severe misorientation of affected neurons during their migration without altering their cell fate. Studies in cultured cortical slices further showed the requirement of the endogenous gradient of Sema3A for the proper migration of newborn neurons. Results from transwell chemotaxis assays in dissociated culture of newborn cortical neurons also supported the notion that Sema3A attracts the migration of these neurons through the receptor NP1. Thus, Sema3A may serve as a chemoattractive guidance signal for the radial migration of newborn cortical neurons toward upper layers. This is the first demonstration that radial migration of cortical neurons is guided by gradient of extracellular guidance factors. This study also suggests that guidance factors may guide the radial migration by their actions on the growth cone of the leading process of migrating neurons, via mechanisms similar to that found for their actions on axon guidance and dendritic orientation, followed by long-range cytoplasmic signaling that coordinates the forward motility of the entire neuron.5In this study, we have only observed an attractive effect of Sema3A in the radial migration of the layer II/III cortical neurons. However, to form the highly ordered laminar structure of the cortex, the entire process of neuronal migration is likely to depend on coordinated actions of multiple factors in the developing cortex, including other semaphorin family members and other guidance molecules, e.g., slits6 and ephrins,7 which are also expressed in the CP. We hypothesize that four groups of extracellular factors orchestrate to promote the proper radial migration and cortical lamination: (1) factors that are expressed in superficial layers of cortex and in a descending gradient, like Sema3A, may attract the upward migration of newborn neurons (attractive factors), (2) factors enriched in the VZ may exert repulsive action and help to “push” newborn neurons out of their birthplace (repulsive factors), (3) those factors widely expressed in all cortical layers may promote the motility of migrating neurons (pro-migratory factors) and (4) Some repulsive cues may be locally expressed in the superficial layer of cortex to prevent the over migration of neurons when they have arrived at the outmost layer (stop signal). Under the guidance of these four groups of factors, newborn neurons migrate all the way from VZ to the outmost layer of CP and then settle down. One of our recent tasks is to try to identify these four groups of factors.If the radial migration and cortical lamination are guided by diffusible factors, why is radial glial system necessary for this migration process? In other words, why earlier-born neurons in different layers cannot provide the supportive adhesion to young neurons during their radial migration? A potential explanation is that neurons in cortex undergo maturation after terminating their migration, accompanying with changes in their expression profiles of adhesion ligands, and become less and less supportive to the neuronal migration. In contrast, as a kind of cortical progenitor cells, radial glial cells maintain a relatively ‘young’ state and continue to express supportive adhesion ligands over a very long developmental stage. Thus, only the radial glial filament is capable of providing a bridge for newborn neurons to migrate over a very long distance across the non-permissive cell layers. In summary, we believe that during the cortical radial migration, signals from diffusible factors override the adhesive signal from radial glial fibers to promote the appropriate migration and placement of newborn neurons.? Open in a separate windowFigure 1A schematic diagram for the guidance of cortical radial migration by diffusible factors. (A) A model for the distribution of four groups of guidance factors in developing cortex. Radial glial filaments are shown in red, young neurons are in green. There may exist a descending gradient of attractive factors in upper cortical layers (yellow) and an ascending gradient of repulsive factors (blue) near the ventricular zone (VZ). Stop signals (purple) may come from the surface of cortex, and pro-migratory factors (dots) may be widely distributed. (B) Representative image of EGFP-labeled neurons migrating along radial glial filaments in the cortical tissue of E20 mouse. Sections were counterstained with DAPI (Red). Scale bar, 100 µm.  相似文献   

4.
Differential adhesion between migrating neurons and transient radial glial fibers enables the deployment of neurons into appropriate layers in the developing cerebral cortex. The identity of radial glial signals that regulate the termination of migration remains unclear. Here, we identified a radial glial surface antigen, SPARC (secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine)-like 1, distributed predominantly in radial glial fibers passing through the upper strata of the cortical plate (CP) where neurons end their migration. Neuronal migration and adhesion assays indicate that SPARC-like 1 functions to terminate neuronal migration by reducing the adhesivity of neurons at the top of the CP. Cortical neurons fail to achieve appropriate positions in the absence of SPARC-like 1 function in vivo. Together, these data suggest that antiadhesive signaling via SPARC-like 1 on radial glial cell surfaces may enable neurons to recognize the end of migration in the developing cerebral cortex.  相似文献   

5.
Cortical development is dependent on the timely production and migration of neurons from neurogenic sites to their mature positions. Mutations in several receptors for extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules and their downstream signaling cascades produce dysplasia in brain. Although mutation of a critical binding site in the gene that encodes the ECM molecule laminin γ1 (Lamc1) disrupts cortical lamination, the ECM ligand(s) for many ECM receptors have not been demonstrated directly in the cortex. Several isoforms of the heterotrimeric laminins, all containing the β2 and γ3 chain, have been isolated from the brain, suggesting they are important for CNS function. Here, we report that mice homozygous null for the laminin β2 and γ3 chains exhibit cortical laminar disorganization. Mice lacking both of these laminin chains exhibit hallmarks of human cobblestone lissencephaly (type II, nonclassical): they demonstrate severe laminar disruption; midline fusion; perturbation of Cajal‐Retzius cell distribution; altered radial glial cell morphology; and ectopic germinal zones. Surprisingly, heterozygous mice also exhibit laminar disruption of cortical neurons, albeit with lesser severity. In compound null mice, the pial basement membrane is fractured, and the distribution of a key laminin receptor, dystroglycan, is altered. These data suggest that β2 and γ3‐containing laminins play an important dose‐dependent role in development of the cortical pial basement membrane, which serves as an attachment site for Cajal‐Retzius and radial glial cells, thereby guiding neural development. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2013  相似文献   

6.
We show that the neural cell recognition molecule Close Homolog of L1 (CHL1) is required for neuronal positioning and dendritic growth of pyramidal neurons in the posterior region of the developing mouse neocortex. CHL1 was expressed in pyramidal neurons in a high-caudal to low-rostral gradient within the developing cortex. Deep layer pyramidal neurons of CHL1-minus mice were shifted to lower laminar positions in the visual and somatosensory cortex and developed misoriented, often inverted apical dendrites. Impaired migration of CHL1-minus cortical neurons was suggested by strikingly slower rates of radial migration in cortical slices, failure to potentiate integrin-dependent haptotactic cell migration in vitro, and accumulation of migratory cells in the intermediate and ventricular/subventricular zones in vivo. The restriction of CHL1 expression and effects of its deletion in posterior neocortical areas suggests that CHL1 may regulate area-specific neuronal connectivity and, by extension, function in the visual and somatosensory cortex.  相似文献   

7.
Radial glia are among the earliest cell types to differentiate in the developing mammalian forebrain. Glial fibers span the early cortical wall, forming a dense scaffold; this persists throughout corticogenesis, providing a cellular substrate which supports and directs the migration of young neurons. Although the mechanisms regulating radial glial cell development are poorly understood, a secreted cortical radial glial differentiation signal was recently identified in the embryonic mouse forebrain. This signal is abundant at the time radial glia function to support neuronal migration, and down-regulated perinatally, when radial glia are known to undergo transformation into astrocytes. Therefore, it seems that this signal functions as a radial glial maintenance factor, the availability of which regulates the phenotype of cortical astroglia. Here the differentiation signal is further characterized as RF60, a protein with a molecular weight of approximately 60 kD. In addition, the neurologic mutant mouse reeler provides a genetic model for analysis of RF60 function. Radial glia in reeler cortex are shown to be poorly differentiated and the radial scaffold is shown to be maintained for a shorter time than normal. Furthermore, although astroglial cells from normal cortex are induced to elaborate a radial phenotype by RF60, reeler astroglia show an impaired differentiation response to this. These findings suggest that an intrinsic defect in glial differentiation contributes to the phenotype of abnormal cortical lamination seen in reeler mouse, and indicate that RF60 may play a critical role in normal cortical patterning. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 33: 459–472, 1997  相似文献   

8.
Neuronal migration is crucial for the construction of neuronal architecture such as layers and nuclei. Most inhibitory interneurons in the neocortex derive from the basal forebrain and migrate tangentially; however, little is known about the mode of migration of these neurons in the cortex. We used glutamate decarboxylase (Gad)67-green fluorescent protein (GFP) knock-in embryonic mice with expression of GFP in gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-ergic neurons and performed time-lapse analysis. In coronal slices, many GFP-positive neurons in the lower intermediate zone (IZ) and subventricular zone (SVZ) showed robust tangential migration from lateral to medial cortex, while others showed radial and non-radial migration mostly towards the pial surface. In flat-mount preparations, GFP-positive neurons of the marginal zone (MZ) showed multidirectional tangential migration. Some of these neurons descended toward the cortical plate (CP). Intracortical migration of these neurons was largely unaffected by a treatment that cleaves glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchors. These findings suggest that tangential migration of cortical interneurons from lateral to medial cortex predominantly occurs in the IZ/SVZ and raise the possibility that a part of the pial surface-directed neurons in the IZ/SVZ reach the MZ, whereby they spread into the whole area of the cortex. At least a part of these neurons may descend toward the CP. Our results also suggest that intracortical migration of GABAergic neurons occurs independent of GPI-anchored proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The mammalian cerebral cortex consists of six layers that are generated via coordinated neuronal migration during the embryonic period. Recent studies identified specific phases of radial migration of cortical neurons. After the final division, neurons transform from a multipolar to a bipolar shape within the subventricular zone-intermediate zone (SVZ-IZ) and then migrate along radial glial fibres. Mice lacking Cdk5 exhibit abnormal corticogenesis owing to neuronal migration defects. When we introduced GFP into migrating neurons at E14.5 by in utero electroporation, we observed migrating neurons in wild-type but not in Cdk5(-/-) embryos after 3-4 days. Introduction of the dominant-negative form of Cdk5 into the wild-type migrating neurons confirmed specific impairment of the multipolar-to-bipolar transition within the SVZ-IZ in a cell-autonomous manner. Cortex-specific Cdk5 conditional knockout mice showed inverted layering of the cerebral cortex and the layer V and callosal neurons, but not layer VI neurons, had severely impaired dendritic morphology. The amount of the dendritic protein Map2 was decreased in the cerebral cortex of Cdk5-deficient mice, and the axonal trajectory of cortical neurons within the cortex was also abnormal. These results indicate that Cdk5 is required for proper multipolar-to-bipolar transition, and a deficiency of Cdk5 results in abnormal morphology of pyramidal neurons. In addition, proper radial neuronal migration generates an inside-out pattern of cerebral cortex formation and normal axonal trajectories of cortical pyramidal neurons.  相似文献   

10.
Tangential migration is a mode of cell movement, which in the developing cerebral cortex, is defined by displacement parallel to the ventricular surface and orthogonal to the radial glial fibers. This mode of long‐range migration is a strategy by which distinct neuronal classes generated from spatially and molecularly distinct origins can integrate to form appropriate neural circuits within the cortical plate. While it was previously believed that only GABAergic cortical interneurons migrate tangentially from their origins in the subpallial ganglionic eminences to integrate in the cortical plate, it is now known that transient populations of glutamatergic neurons also adopt this mode of migration. These include Cajal‐Retzius cells (CRs), subplate neurons (SPs), and cortical plate transient neurons (CPTs), which have crucial roles in orchestrating the radial and tangential development of the embryonic cerebral cortex in a noncell‐autonomous manner. While CRs have been extensively studied, it is only in the last decade that the molecular mechanisms governing their tangential migration have begun to be elucidated. To date, the mechanisms of SPs and CPTs tangential migration remain unknown. We therefore review the known signaling pathways, which regulate parameters of CRs migration including their motility, contact‐redistribution and adhesion to the pial surface, and discuss this in the context of how CR migration may regulate their signaling activity in a spatial and temporal manner. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 76: 847–881, 2016  相似文献   

11.
Neuronal migration is integral to the development of the cerebral cortex and higher brain function. Cortical neuron migration defects lead to mental disorders such as lissencephaly and epilepsy. Interaction of neurons with their extracellular environment regulates cortical neuron migration through cell surface receptors. However, it is unclear how the signals from extracellular matrix proteins are transduced intracellularly. We report here that mouse embryos lacking the Ras family guanine nucleotide exchange factor, C3G (Rapgef1, Grf2), exhibit a cortical neuron migration defect resulting in a failure to split the preplate into marginal zone and subplate and a failure to form a cortical plate. C3G-deficient cortical neurons fail to migrate. Instead, they arrest in a multipolar state and accumulate below the preplate. The basement membrane is disrupted and radial glial processes are disorganised and lack attachment in C3G-deficient brains. C3G is activated in response to reelin in cortical neurons, which, in turn, leads to activation of the small GTPase Rap1. In C3G-deficient cells, Rap1 GTP loading in response to reelin stimulation is reduced. In conclusion, the Ras family regulator C3G is essential for two aspects of cortex development, namely radial glial attachment and neuronal migration.  相似文献   

12.
During the development of cerebral cortex, newborn pyramidal neurons originated from the ventricle wall migrate outwardly to the superficial layer of cortex under the guidance of radial glial filaments. Whether this radial migration of young neurons is guided by gradient of diffusible factors or simply driven by a mass action of newly generated neurons at the ventricular zone is entirely unknown, a potential guidance mechanism that has long been overlooked. Our recent study showed that a guidance molecule semaphorin-3A, which is expressed in descending gradient across cortical layers, may serve as a chemoattractive guidance signal for radial migration of newborn cortical neurons toward upper layers. We hypothesize the existence of four groups of extracellular factors that can guide the radial migration of young neurons: (1) attractive factors expressing in superficial layers of cortex, (2) repulsive factors enriched in the ventricular zone, (3) pro-migratory factors uniformly expressed in all cortical layers, and (4) stop signals locally expressed in the outmost layer of cortex.  相似文献   

13.
N‐cadherin‐mediated adhesion is essential for maintaining the tissue architecture and stem cell niche in the developing neocortex. N‐cadherin expression level is precisely and dynamically controlled throughout development; however, the underlying regulatory mechanisms remain largely unknown. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play an important role in the regulation of protein expression and subcellular localisation. In this study, we show that three miRNAs belonging to the miR379–410 cluster regulate N‐cadherin expression levels in neural stem cells and migrating neurons. The overexpression of these three miRNAs in radial glial cells repressed N‐cadherin expression and increased neural stem cell differentiation and neuronal migration. This phenotype was rescued when N‐cadherin was expressed from a miRNA‐insensitive construct. Transient abrogation of the miRNAs reduced stem cell differentiation and increased cell proliferation. The overexpression of these miRNAs specifically in newborn neurons delayed migration into the cortical plate, whereas the knockdown increased migration. Collectively, our results indicate a novel role for miRNAs of the miR379–410 cluster in the fine‐tuning of N‐cadherin expression level and in the regulation of neurogenesis and neuronal migration in the developing neocortex.  相似文献   

14.
Modes of neuronal migration in the developing cerebral cortex   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The conventional scheme of cortical formation shows that postmitotic neurons migrate away from the germinal ventricular zone to their positions in the developing cortex, guided by the processes of radial glial cells. However, recent studies indicate that different neuronal types adopt distinct modes of migration in the developing cortex. Here, we review evidence for two modes of radial movement: somal translocation, which is adopted by the early-generated neurons; and glia-guided locomotion, which is used predominantly by pyramidal cells. Cortical interneurons, which originate in the ventral telencephalon, use a third mode of migration. They migrate tangentially into the cortex, then seek the ventricular zone before moving radially to take up their positions in the cortical anlage.  相似文献   

15.
During cortical development, newly generated neurons migrate radially toward their final positions. Although several candidate genes essential for this radial migration have been reported, the signaling pathways regulating it are largely unclear. Here we studied the role of phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3-kinase and its downstream signaling molecules in the radial migration of cortical neurons in vivo and in vitro. The expression of constitutively active and dominant-negative PI 3-kinases markedly inhibited radial migration. In the neocortical slice culture, a PI 3-kinase inhibitor suppressed the formation of GTP-bound Rac1 and Cdc42 and radial migration. Constitutively active and dominant-negative forms of Rac1 and Cdc42 but not Akt also significantly inhibited radial migration. In migrating neurons, wild-type Rac1 and Cdc42 showed different localizations; Rac1 localized to the plasma membrane and Cdc42 to the perinuclear region on the side of the leading processes. These results suggest that both the PI 3-kinase/Rac1 and Cdc42 pathways are involved in the radial migration of cortical neurons and that they have different roles.  相似文献   

16.
14‐3‐3 proteins are ubiquitously‐expressed and multifunctional proteins. There are seven isoforms in mammals with a high level of homology, suggesting potential functional redundancy. We previously found that two of seven isoforms, 14‐3‐3epsilon and 14‐3‐3zeta, are important for brain development, in particular, radial migration of pyramidal neurons in the developing cerebral cortex. In this work, we analyzed the function of another isoform, the protein 14‐3‐3gamma, with respect to neuronal migration in the developing cortex. We found that in utero 14‐3‐3gamma‐deficiency resulted in delays in neuronal migration as well as morphological defects. Migrating neurons deficient in 14‐3‐3gamma displayed a thicker leading process stem, and the basal ends of neurons were not able to reach the boundary between the cortical plate and the marginal zone. Consistent with the results obtained from in utero electroporation, time‐lapse live imaging of brain slices revealed that the ablation of the 14‐3‐3gamma proteins in pyramidal neurons slowed down their migration. In addition, the 14‐3‐3gamma deficient neurons showed morphological abnormalities, including increased multipolar neurons with a thicker leading processes stem during migration. These results indicate that the 14‐3‐3gamma proteins play an important role in radial migration by regulating the morphology of migrating neurons in the cerebral cortex. The findings underscore the pathological phenotypes of brain development associated with the disruption of different 14‐3‐3 proteins and will advance the preclinical data regarding disorders caused by neuronal migration defects. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 76: 600–614, 2016  相似文献   

17.
Anton ES  Kreidberg JA  Rakic P 《Neuron》1999,22(2):277-289
Changes in specific cell-cell recognition and adhesion interactions between neurons and radial glial cells regulate neuronal migration as well as the establishment of distinct layers in the developing cerebral cortex. Here, we show that alpha3beta1 integrin is necessary for neuron-glial recognition during neuronal migration and that alpha(v) integrins provide optimal levels of the basic neuron-glial adhesion needed to maintain neuronal migration on radial glial fibers. A gliophilic-to-neurophilic switch in the adhesive preference of developing cortical neurons occurs following the loss of alpha3beta1 integrin function. Furthermore, the targeted mutation of the alpha3 integrin gene results in abnormal layering of the cerebral cortex. These results suggest that alpha3beta1 and alpha(v) integrins regulate distinct aspects of neuronal migration and neuron-glial interactions during corticogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
The architectonics of the mammalian brain arise from a remarkable range of directed cell migrations, which orchestrate the emergence of cortical neuronal layers and pattern brain circuitry. At different stages of cortical histogenesis, specific modes of cell motility are essential to the stepwise formation of cortical architecture. These movements range from interkinetic nuclear movements in the ventricular zone, to migrations of early-born, postmitotic polymorphic cells into the preplate, to the radial migration of precursors of cortical output neurons across the thickening cortical wall, and the vast, tangential migrations of interneurons from the basal forebrain into the emerging cortical layers. In all cases, actomyosin motors act in concert with cell adhesion receptor systems to provide the force and traction needed for forward movement. As key regulators of actin and microtubule cytoskeletons, cell polarity, and adhesion, the Rho GTPases play critical roles in CNS neuronal migration. This review will focus on the different types of migration in the developing neocortex and cerebellar cortex, and the role of the Rho GTPases, their regulators and effectors in these CNS migrations, with particular emphasis on their involvement in radial migration.  相似文献   

19.
Formation of our highly structured human brain involves a cascade of events, including differentiation, fate determination, and migration of neural precursors. In humans, unlike many other organisms, the cerebral cortex is the largest component of the brain. As in other mammals, the human cerebral cortex is located on the surface of the telencephalon and generally consists of six layers that are formed in an orderly fashion. During neuronal development, newly born neurons, moving in a radial direction, must migrate through previously formed layers to reach their proper cortical position. This is one of several neuronal migration routes that takes place in the developing brain; other modes of migration are tangential. Abnormal neuronal migration may in turn result in abnormal development of the cortical layers and deleterious consequences, such as Lissencephaly. Lissencephaly, a severe brain malformation, can be caused by mutations in one of two known genes:LIS1 anddoublecortin (DCX). Recent in vitro and in vivo studies, report on possible functions for these gene products.  相似文献   

20.
L1cam (L1) is a cell adhesion molecule associated with a spectrum of human neurological diseases, the most well-known being X-linked hydrocephalus. Although we recently demonstrated that L1 plays an important role in neuronal migration during cortical histogenesis, the mechanisms of delayed migration have still not been clarified. In this study, we found that cell locomotion in the intermediate zone and terminal translocation in the primitive cortical zone (PCZ) were affected by L1-knockdown (L1-KD). Time-lapse analyses revealed that L1-KD neurons produced by in utero electroporation of shRNA targeting L1 (L1-shRNAs) molecules showed decreased locomotion velocity in the intermediate zone, compared with control neurons. Furthermore, L1-KD neurons showed longer and more undulated leading processes during translocation through the primitive cortical zone. The curvature index, a quantitative index for curvilinearity, as well as the length of the leading process, were increased, whereas the somal movement was decreased in L1-KD neurons during terminal translocation in the PCZ. These results suggest that L1 has a role in radial migration of cortical neurons.  相似文献   

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