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1.
The 180 kDa component of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM-180), total NCAM (NCAM-total) and the polysialic acid modification of NCAM (PSA) show similar temporal and spatial regulation in the developing tecta of Pleurodeles waltl (salamander) and Discoglossus pictus (frog). Whereas NCAM-total is found throughout the tectal tissue on neurons and glia, NCAM-180 is only found on nonproliferating neurons and in fiber layers. PSA is expressed by a subset of NCAM-180-positive cells. Western blots show that there is little polysialylated NCAM-140 in the developing amphibian tectum. Regions unstained for PSA and NCAM-180 correspond precisely to the growth zones of the tectum. NCAM-180 and PSA are not present in tecta of early larvae. Staining intensity is strongest at midlarval stages for both antigens. At metamorphosis, PSA is strongly downregulated, whereas NCAM-180 is downregulated in juvenile animals. Both antigens are still present in fiber layers of adult animals. In dissociated tissue culture of the frog tectum, NCAM-180 is not present on astrocytes, but on neuronal cells. Expression is enhanced at cell contact sites, suggesting that NCAM-180 is involved in cell contact stabilization. This study shows that general features of temporal and spatial regulation of NCAM isoforms and PSA are highly conserved in frog and salamander tecta, despite large differences in the rate of cell migration and the degree of lamination in these homologous brain regions.  相似文献   

2.
G E Gray  J R Sanes 《Neuron》1991,6(2):211-225
We used retrovirus-mediated gene transfer to study the migration of clonally related cells in the developing chicken optic tectum. Clonal cohorts initially form radial arrays in the ventricular zone (approximately E5), but eventually divide into three separate migratory streams. In the first migration, a minor population of cells migrates tangentially along axon fascicles in medio-laterally directed files (approximately E6-E7); these eventually differentiate into multipolar efferent cells. After E7, the majority of cells in each clone migrate radially along fascicles of radial glia to form the tectal plate, wherein they differentiate into neurons and astrocytes. Around E9, a set of small cells leaves the radial arrays in superficial layers to form a second tangential migration; at least some of these differentiate into astrocytes. Thus, as the tectum develops, cells derived from a single multipotential precursor migrate along three separate pathways, follow separate guidance cues, and adopt distinct phenotypes.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The optic tectum of Calamoichthys calabaricus (Polypteriformes) shows a relatively complex vertical stratification, with six main layers and a varied neuronal typology. In particular, pyriform neurons in the well developed stratum griseum periventriculare and some multipolar neurons in the stratum griseum profundum represent the efferent elements of the tectum, while the optic and lemniscal inputs to the tectum converge in the plexiform sublayers of the stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale. In the circuitry of the tectum some modulation is achieved by some of the polymorphic cells of the stratum griseum internum and by the horizontal cells of the outer layers. Notwithstanding some differences with respect to the teleost optic lobe (i.e., the absence of a torus longitudinalis; the lack of a stratum fibrosum marginale; the modest size of the stratum fibrosum profundum; the paucity of neurons in the stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale; and the ill-defined separation of the layers of the afferent and efferent fibers), the optic tectum of Calamoichthys resembles the mesotectal type characteristic of teleosts, anurans and reptiles. It exhibits higher degree of organization than the optic tectum of the Chondrostei.  相似文献   

4.
The laminated structure of the optic tectum is formed by radial and tangential cell migration during development. Studies of developing chick optic tectum have revealed two streams of tangential cell migration in the middle and superficial layers, which have distinctive origins, migratory paths, modes of migration, and destinations. We will review the process of the two types of tangential migrations, in order to elucidate their roles in the formation of the optic tectum layers.  相似文献   

5.
Data on distribution of biologically active substances in the turtle optic tectum are compared with results of similar experiments on other reptilian as well as on avian species. In two turtle species (Testudo horsfield and Emys orbicularis), immunoreactivity to monoamines (5-HT and TH), NPY, as well as NADPH-d activity were similarly distributed in neuropil of the SGFS retinorecipient part and in that of the SGP/SAP periventricular layers. Immunoreactivity to neuropeptides SP and m-Enk was maximal in neuropil of the SGFS non-retinorecipient part. The periventricular layers were characterized by the abundant radial SP- and mENK-ir as well as the NADPH-d-positive neurons. Diffusely dispersed ChAT-ir elements and many ir fibers perpenducilar to the tectal surface were observed in the SGFS retinorecipient part; the SGFS non-retinorecipient part contained a dense plexus of thick ir fibers and diffusely distributed ir terminals. The GABA ir cells were the most numerous in the tectum; they were spread in all tectal layers. Thus, various biologically active substances located in superficial retinorecipient tectal sublayers could affect processing and transmission of information via ascending dendrites of neurons in deeper layers. The cells containing SP, m-Enk, and NADPH-d had laminar organization in SGP; via the system of ascending and descending axons, they are able to affect other structures within and outside of the optic tectum. Putative sources of tectal modulatory innervation are discussed. In all studied reptilian and avian species, the principal similarity is revealed in the neurochemical organization. Some differences might be explained by the level of tectal differentiation due to factors of phylogenetic evolution and/or adaptive specialization.  相似文献   

6.
Neurotransmitter expression can be regulated by both activity and neurotrophins in a number of in vitro systems. We examined whether either of these factors was likely to play a role in the in vivo optic nerve‐dependent regulation of a substance P‐like immunoreactive (SP‐ir) population of cells in the developing optic tectum of the frog. In contrast to our previous results with the adult system, blocking tectal cell responses to glutamate release by retinal ganglion cells with 6‐cyano‐7‐nitroquinoxaline‐2,3 dione (CNQX) did not affect the percent of SP‐ir cells in the developing tectum. Treatment with d‐(‐)‐2‐amino‐5‐phosphonovaleric acid (d‐AP‐5) was also ineffective in this regard, although both it and CNQX treatment disrupted visual map topography. Chronic treatment with brain‐derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and neurotrophin‐4/5 (NT‐4/5) produced increases in SP‐ir cells in the treated lobes of normal animals, which were significant in the case of NT‐4/5. Both substances also prevented the decrease of SP cells that would otherwise occur in the deafferented lobe of unilaterally optic nerve‐transected tadpoles. These changes in the percent of SP‐ir cells occurred without any detectable changes in the overall number of tectal cells. NGF had no effect on SP expression. Nor did it affect topographic map formation, which was disrupted by treatment with either BDNF or NT‐4/5. Our results demonstrate that different mechanisms regulate SP expression in the developing and adult tectum. They indicate that neurotrophin levels in the developing optic tectum may selectively regulate a specific neuropeptide‐expressing population of cells. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 48: 131–149, 2001  相似文献   

7.
Summary Using the ABC immunohistochemical method, we investigated the distribution of calbindinlike immunoreactive structures in the optic tectum of normal fish, Tinca tinca, and from normal and unilaterally eye-enucleated fish, Cyprinus carpio. In nonoperated individuals of both species the optic tectum contained numerous immunoreactive neurons with strongly positive somata located in the stratum periventriculare and a thick immunolabeled dendritic shaft ascending radially toward the stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale. The retinorecipient layers contained many fibrous immunoreactive structures. Some varicose fibers, isolated or in small bundles, were localized to the stratum album centrale, especially in the dorsal tectal half. Unilateral eye removal produced the disappearance of the immunoreactive fibrous structures located in the retinorecipient layers of the tectum contralateral to the enucleation. The present work shows that calbindinlike immunoreactive substances are localized in specific neural circuits of the fish optic tectum and suggests that the calbindin-like immunoreactive fibers in the retinorecipient strata are of retinal origin.  相似文献   

8.
The integration of multisensory information takes place in the optic tectum where visual and auditory/mechanosensory inputs converge and regulate motor outputs. The circuits that integrate multisensory information are poorly understood. In an effort to identify the basic components of a multisensory integrative circuit, we determined the projections of the mechanosensory input from the periphery to the optic tectum and compared their distribution to the retinotectal inputs in Xenopus laevis tadpoles using dye‐labeling methods. The peripheral ganglia of the lateral line system project to the ipsilateral hindbrain and the axons representing mechanosensory inputs along the anterior/posterior body axis are mapped along the ventrodorsal axis in the axon tract in the dorsal column of the hindbrain. Hindbrain neurons project axons to the contralateral optic tectum. The neurons from anterior and posterior hindbrain regions project axons to the dorsal and ventral tectum, respectively. While the retinotectal axons project to a superficial lamina in the tectal neuropil, the hindbrain axons project to a deep neuropil layer. Calcium imaging showed that multimodal inputs converge on tectal neurons. The layer‐specific projections of the hindbrain and retinal axons suggest a functional segregation of sensory inputs to proximal and distal tectal cell dendrites, respectively. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2009  相似文献   

9.
Using immunohistochemistry and a tracer technique we investigated the distribution in the optic tectum of turtles (Emys orbicularis and Testudo horsfieldi) of the calcium-binding proteins (CaBPr) parvalbumin (PV), calbindin (CB) and calretinin (CR) before and after labeling of the nucleus rotundus (Rot) with horseradish peroxidase. The optic tectum activity of the cytochrome oxidase (CO) was studied in parallel. In the principal link of the tectofugal visual pathway (central gray layer, SGC) in both chelonian species, the sparse PV-ir as well as CB- and CR-ir neurons were found significantly varying both in number and the intensity of immunoreactivity of their bodies and dendrites. In contrast, the superficial (SGFS) and deeper periventricular (SGP) tectal layers comprised numerous cells immunoreactive to all three CaBPr in different proportions. Only few retrogradely labeled tectorotundal SGC neurons expressed PV, CB or CR. The very large PV-ir neurons in SGC and SAC were not retrogradely labeled; morphologically they matched the efferent neurons with descending projections. SGC neurons of two chelonian species differed in the level of CO activity. Intense immunoreactivity to all three CaBPr and high CO activity were detected in both species in SGFS neuropil with some differences in sublaminar distribution patterns. The peculiarities of the CaBPr and CO activity distribution patterns in different segments of SGC neurons are discussed as related to the laminar organization of the turtle tectum and its retinal innervation. It is suggested that in the projection tectorotundal SGC neurons the CaBPr are concentrated mainly in their distal dendrites that contact retinal afferents in the superficial retinorecipient tectal layer.  相似文献   

10.
Neurons acquire their distinct shapes after passing through many transitional stages in early development. To reveal the dynamics and spatiotemporal sequence of process formation in situ, the growth of neurons in the optic tectum of live zebrafish embryos (54 to >100 h old) was monitored using time-lapse videorecordings. Neurons were labeled by injecting the fluorescent vital dye DiO into the cell-rich layer of the developing tectum in 50- to 70-h-old embryos. In phase 1, tectal neurons possess an apical “primary process” which reaches to the ventral aspect of the tectal neuropil. The primary process produces at its tip short transitory branches, some with growth cones, over a period of roughly 6 h. One of the growth cones then elongates rapidly and grows toward the caudal tectum via a route characteristic of efferent axons. After retraction of excess branches and growth cones, branching activity resumes at the tip of the primary process to form the dendritic tree (phase 2). The dendritic tree develops in the tectal neuropil through emission and retraction of many branches during a period of >20 h (our longest continuous time-lapse movie). The tectal territory “explored” in this way is larger than the area finally covered by the tree resulting from growth and loss of branches. The dynamics observed here directly are probably characteristic for dendrite formation in vertebrates. Moreover, consistent with the sequence of neuronal differentiation observed in vitro, the growth of the axon precedes that of the dendrites, although both emerge from a common primary process in this type of tectal neuron. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 32: 627–639, 1997  相似文献   

11.
The transport of RNA from the ganglion cell bodies within the retina to the contralateral optic tectum has been studied in the chick following intraocular injection of radioactive uridine. By tracing the appearance of labeled RNA at the proximal end of the optic nerve as it leaves the eyeball and comparing this to the time of arrival of RNA within the optic tectum, the migratory velocity of axonal RNA has been calculated to be around 12 mm per day. The continuation of RNA migration to the optic tectum in the presence of intracerebrally injected actinomycin-D but not in the presence of the intraocularly injected drug, suggests a retinal site of synthesis of the excess RNA found in the tectum innervated by the injected eye. A study of the rate of disppearance of radioactivity of the transported RNA in the optic lobes, suggested that this RNA turns over more rapidly than the bulk of tectal RNA. The destination of migrating RNA within the optic tectum has been autoradiographically examined. Most radioactive RNA is found in the outer tectal layers in which are found the afferent fibers of the optic tract and most of their synaptic terminations. Label is not confined to these areas however but is also present in the deeper layers of the optic tectum which are not known to contain any primary synapses of the axons from retinal ganglion cells.  相似文献   

12.
Hippocampus dentate gyrus (DG) is characterized by neuronal plasticity processes in adulthood, and polysialylation of NCAM promotes neuronal plasticity. In previous investigations we found that α‐tocopherol increased the PSA‐NCAM‐positive granule cell number in adult rat DG, suggesting that α‐tocopherol may enhance neuronal plasticity. To verify this hypothesis, in the present study, structural remodeling in adult rat DG was investigated under α‐tocopherol supplementation conditions. PSA‐NCAM expression was evaluated by Western blotting, evaluation of PSA‐NCAM‐positive granule cell density, and morphometric analysis of PSA‐NCAM‐positive processes. In addition, the optical density of synaptophysin immunoreactivity and the synaptic profile density, examined by electron microscopy, were evaluated. Moreover, considering that PSA‐NCAM expression has been found to be related to PKCδ activity and α‐tocopherol has been shown to inhibit PKC activity in vitro, Western blotting and immunohistochemistry followed by densitometry were used to analyze PKC. Our results demonstrated that an increase in PSA‐NCAM expression and optical density of DG molecular layer synaptophysin immunoreactivity occurred in α‐tocopherol‐treated rats. Electron microscopy analysis showed that the increase in synaptophysin expression was related to an increase in synaptic profile density. In addition, Western blotting revealed a decrease in phospho‐PKC Pan and phospho‐PKCδ, demonstrating that α‐tocopherol is also able to inhibit PKC activity in vivo. Likewise, immunoreactivity for the active form of PKCδ was lower in α‐tocopherol‐treated rats than in controls, while no changes were found in PKCδ expression. These results demonstrate that α‐tocopherol is an exogenous factor affecting neuronal plasticity in adult rat DG, possibly through PKCδ inhibition. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2006  相似文献   

13.
(1)From the dorsal surface of the toad (Bufo b. spinosus, B. marinus) optic tectum (OT), field potentials (FP) were recorded at 9 reference sites in response to electrical stimulation of the optic nerve (ON). The FP showed 4 main components, besides an initial deflection attributed to axonal potentials: two negative waves N1, N2 (attributed to postsynaptic excitatory processes) and two positive waves P2, P3 (attributed to postsynaptic inhibitory processes). The responses across the reference sites were rather similar in different individuals. (2) Electrical stimulation of an area in the ipsilateral pretectal lateral posterodorsal and posterior (Lpd/P) thalamic region evoked tectal FPs showing mainly a negative and a positive wave. Regarding wave amplitudes, the FPs displayed disproportionalities across the reference sites. (3) Electrical stimulation of the contralateral Lpd/P evoked mainly a positive wave in the tectal FP whose disproportionality corresponded roughly to the one obtained to ipsilateral Lpd/P stimulation. (4) The inital negative wave of the tectal FP in response to ON stimulation was nearly abolished, if Lpd/P stimulation preceded ON stimulation at a delay of 17–25 ms. (5) Since FPs showed adaptation to repetitive stimulation, various experiments were carried out to distinguish adaptation phenomena from effects of neuronal interactions between Lpd/P and OT. (6) The results provide evidence that ON- and Lpd/P-mediated inputs interact in superficial tectal layers, whereby pretectotectal input suppresses retinotectal excitatory information transfer. Input of Lpd/P to the contralateral superficial OT suggests postsynaptic inhibition. This study provides no information about pretectal inputs to deeper tectal layers, which anatomically are known to exist.Abbreviations A-I recording sites from the dorsal tectal surface - D t delay between Lpd/P and ON stimulation - EPSP IPSP excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic potentials, respectively - FP field potential - L latency of FP waves - ON optic nerve - OT optic tectum - Lpd/P lateral posterodorsal and posterior pretectal thalamic region - Lpv lateral posteroventral pretectal thalamic nucleus - N, P negative and positive waves of FPs, respectively - PRE presynaptic axonal input - TH pretectal thalamic neurons  相似文献   

14.
Astrocytes have been considered to be transformed from radial glial cells that appear at early stage of development and play a scaffold-role for neuronal cell migration. Recent studies indicate that neuroepithelial cells in the spinal cord also give rise to astrocytes. However, the mode of astroglial generation and migration in the ventricular neuroepithelium remains poorly understood. In this study, we have utilized immunohistochemical and retroviral lineage tracing methods to characterize the developmental profiles of astrocytes in the chick optic tectum, which develops from both the neural tube and invasion of optic tract. Chick vimentin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) were found as single bands at molecular weights consistent with those reported for mammalian species. Differential developmental trends were observed for both proteins with relative vimentin levels decreasing and GFAP levels increasing with embryonic age. We observed two streams of tectal GFAP-labeled astrocytes originated from the tectal ventricle (intrinsic origin) and the optic tract (extrinsic origin). The extrinsic astrocytes arose from the ventral neuroepithelium of the third ventricle, dispersed bilaterally to the optic tract, and subsequently to the outer layer of optic tectum, indicating migration of astrocytes along retinal ganglion cell axons. On the other hand, the intrinsic astrocytes from the tectal ventricular neuroepithelium appeared first in the ventral part of the optic tectum, and then in the lateral and dorsal tectum. The intrinsic tectal astrocytes closely associated with fascicles of vimentin-labeled radial glial cells, indicating a presumptive radial migration of astrocytes. These results demonstrated that the optic tectum contains heterogeneous populations of astrocytes developed from the different origins and routes of migration.  相似文献   

15.
Cellular interactions mediated by the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) are critical in cell migration, differentiation and plasticity. Switching of the NCAM‐interaction mode, from adhesion to signalling, is determined by NCAM carrying a particular post‐translational modification, polysialic acid (PSA). Regulation of cell‐surface PSA‐NCAM is traditionally viewed as a direct consequence of polysialyltransferase activity. Taking advantage of the polysialyltransferase Ca2+‐dependent activity, we demonstrate in TE671 cells that downregulation of PSA‐NCAM synthesis constitutes a necessary but not sufficient condition to reduce cell‐surface PSA‐NCAM; instead, PSA‐NCAM turnover required internalization of the molecule into the cytosol. PSA‐NCAM internalization was specifically triggered by collagen in the extracellular matrix (ECM) and prevented by insulin‐like growth factor (IGF1) and insulin. Our results pose a novel role for IGF1 and insulin in controlling cell migration through modulation of PSA‐NCAM turnover at the cell surface.

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16.
17.
The optic tectum is a major subdivision of the visual system in reptiles. Previous studies have characterized the laminar pattern, the neuronal populations, and the afferent and efferent connections of the optic tectum in a variety of reptiles. However, little is known about the interactions that occur between neurons within the tectum. This study describes two kinds of interactions that occur between one major class of neurons, the radial cells, in the optic tectum of Pseudemys using Nissl, Golgi and electron microscopic preparations. Radial cells have somata which bear long, radially oriented apical dendrites from their upper poles and short, basal dendrites from their lower poles. They are divided into two populations on the basis of the distribution of their somata in the tectum. Deep radial cells have somata densely packed in the stratum griseum periventriculare. Their plasma membranes form casual appositions. Middle radial cells have somata scattered throughout the stratum griseum centrale and stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale and do not contact each other. The apical dendrites of both populations of radial cells participate in vertically oriented, dendritic bundles. The plasma membranes of the dendrites in these bundles form casual appositions in the deeper tectal layers and chemical, dendrodenritic synapses within the stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale. The synapses have clear, round synaptic vesicles and slightly asymmetric membrane densities. Thus, radial cells interact via both casual appositions and chemical synapses. These interactions suggest that radial cells may form a basic framework in the tectum. Because both populations of radial cells extend into the stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale and stratum opticum, they may receive input from some of the same tectal afferent systems. Because the deep radial cells alone have somata and dendrites in the deep tectal layers, they may receive additional inputs that the middle radial cells do not. Neurons in the two populations interact via chemical dendrodentritic synapses, thereby forming vertically oriented modules in the tectum.  相似文献   

18.
Secreted Frizzled‐Related Proteins (SFRPs) are extracellular modulators of Wnt and Bmp signaling. Previous studies in birds and fishes have shown that Sfrp1, a member of this family, is strongly expressed throughout the development of the eye contributing to the specification of the eye field, retina neurogenesis and providing guidance information to retina ganglion cell axons. Here, we report that in medaka fish (Oryzias latipes) the expression of olSfrp5, which is closely related to olSfrp1, largely overlaps with that of olSfrp1 in the eye, but is additionally expressed in the developing midbrain and gut primordium. Morpholino‐based interference with olSfrp5 expression causes microphthalmia and reduction of the tectum size associated with an increase in apoptotic cell death in these structures. Furthermore, interference with the levels of olSfrp5 expression impairs the patterning of the ventral portion of the optic cup, leading in some cases to a fissure coloboma. These early defects are followed by an abnormal retinal and tectal neurogenesis. In particular, only reduced numbers of photoreceptor and RGC were generated in olSfrp5 morphants retinas. The results point to an important role of olSfrp5 in visual system formation and indicate that olSfrp1 and olSfrp5, despite their overlapping expression, have only partially redundant function during eye development. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 2009  相似文献   

19.
Summary The retinal projections of the caecilian Ichthyophis kohtaoensis were investigated by anterograde transport of HRP. The optic tract forms two bundles in the diencephalon, a narrow medial bundle in the optic tectum, and a basal optic tract consisting of few fibres. Terminal fields are in the thalamus, pretectum, tectum, and as a circum-scribed basal optic neuropile in the tegmentum. Thalamic, pretectal and tectal projections are contralateral as well as ipsilateral. The reduced but existing visual projection corresponds to a reduced but existing visually guided behaviour.  相似文献   

20.
Data on distribution of biologically active substances in the turtle optic tectum are compared with results of similar experiments on other reptilian as well as on avian species. In two turtle species (Testudo horsfield and Emys orbicularis), immunoreactivity to monoamines (5-HT and TH), NPY, as well as NADPH-d activity were similarly distributed in neuropil of the SGFS retinorecipient part and in that of the SGP/SAP periventricular layers. Immunoreactivity to neuropeptides SP and m-Enk was maximal in neuropil of the SGFS non-retinorecipient part. The periventricular layers were characterized by the abundant radial SP- and mENK-ir as well as the NADPH-d-positive neurons. Diffusely dispersed ChAT-ir elements and many ir fibers perpenducilar to the tectal surface were observed in the SGFS retinorecipient part; the SGFS non-retinorecipient part contained a dense plexus of thick ir fibers and diffusely distributed ir terminals. The GABA ir cells were the most numerous in the tectum; they were spread in all tectal layers. Thus, various biologically active substance located in superficial retinorecipient tectal sublayers could affect processing and transmission of information via ascending dendrites of neurons in deeper layers. The cells containing SP, m-Enk, and NADPH-d had laminar organization in SGP; via the system of ascending and descending axons, they are able to affect other structures within and outside of the optic tectum. Putative sources of tectal modulatory innervation are discussed. In all studied reptilian and avian species, the principal similarity is revealed in the neurochemical organization. Some differences might be explained by the level of tectal differentiation due to factors of phylogenetic evolution and/or adaptive specialization.  相似文献   

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