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1.
The mesencephalic V neurons and tectobulbar axons in chick embryo project over long distances that appear during the early development of the chick optic tectum. The mesencephalic V neuron and tectobulbar axonal growth begin at Hamburger and Hamilton stage 14 and stage 18, respectively. Both fibers proceed downward from the dorsal to the ventral side of the lateral wall of the optic tectum and then turn caudally and join the medial longitudinal fasciculus. Their axons appear in the most superficial layer of the tectum at early stages and do not cross the dorsal midline of the tectum. Here, we report the role of draxin, a recently identified axon guidance protein, in the formation of the ventrally directed tectum axonal tracts in chicken embryo. draxin is expressed in a high dorsal to low ventral gradient in chick optic tectum. In vitro experiments show that draxin repels neurite outgrowth from dorsal tectum explants. In vivo overexpression resulted in inhibition or misrouting of axon growth in the tectum. Therefore, draxin may be an important member of the collection of repulsive guidance molecules that regulate the formation of the ventrally directed tectum axon tracts.  相似文献   

2.
In contrast to the situation in mammals and birds, neurons in the central nervous system (CNS) of fish—such as the retinal ganglion cells—are capable of regenerating their axons and restoring vision. Special properties of the glial cells and the neurons of the fish visual pathway appear to contribute to the success of axonal regeneration. The fish oligodendrocytes lack the axon growth inhibiting molecules that interfere with axonal extension in mammals. Instead, fish optic nerve oligodendrocytes support—at least in vitro—axonal elongation of fish as well as that of rat retinal axons. Moreover, the fish retinal ganglion cells re-express upon injury a set of growth associated cell surface molecules and equip the regenerating axons throughout their path and up into their target, the tectum opticum with these molecules. This may indicate that the injured fish ganglion cells reactivate the cellular machinery necessary for axonal regrowth and pathfinding. Furthermore, the target itself provides positional marker molecules even in adult fish. These marker molecules are required to guide the regenerating axons back to their retinotopic home territory within the tectum. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
The mAb E 21 recognizes a cell surface glycoprotein selectively associated with fish retinal ganglion cell axons that are in a state of growth. All retinal axons and ganglion cells in goldfish embryos stained for E 21. In adult fish, however, E 21 immunoreactivity exhibited a patterned distribution in ganglion cells in the marginal growth zone of the continuously enlarging fish retina and the new axons emerging from these cells in the retina, optic nerve, and optic tract. The E 21 antigen was absent from older axons, except the terminal arbor layer in the tectum, the Stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale where it was uniformly distributed. Upon optic nerve transection, the previously unlabeled axons reacquired E 21 positivity as they regenerated throughout their path to the tectum. Several months after ONS, however, E 21 staining disappeared from the regenerated axons over most of their lengths but reappeared as in normal fish in the terminal arbor layer. The immunoaffinity-purified E 21 antigen, called Neurolin, has an apparent molecular mass of 86 kD and contains the HNK1/L2 carbohydrate moiety, like several members of the class of cell adhesion molecules of the Ig superfamily. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence has homologies to the cell adhesion molecule DM-Grasp recently described in the chicken. Thus, retinal ganglion cell axons express Neurolin during their development and are able to reexpress this candidate cell adhesion molecule during axonal regeneration, suggesting that Neurolin is functionally important for fish retinal axon growth.  相似文献   

4.
Trying to understand axonal regeneration in the CNS of fish.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
In contrast to the situation in mammals and birds, neurons in the central nervous system (CNS) of fish--such as the retinal ganglion cells--are capable of regenerating their axons and restoring vision. Special properties of the glial cells and the neurons of the fish visual pathway appear to contribute to the success of axonal regeneration. The fish oligodendrocytes lack the axon growth inhibiting molecules that interfere with axonal extension in mammals. Instead, fish optic nerve oligodendrocytes support--at least in vitro--axonal elongation of fish as well as that of rat retinal axons. Moreover, the fish retinal ganglion cells re-express upon injury a set of growth-associated cell surface molecules and equip the regenerating axons throughout their path and up into their target, the tectum opticum with these molecules. This may indicate that the injured fish ganglion cells reactivate the cellular machinery necessary for axonal regrowth and pathfinding. Furthermore, the target itself provides positional marker molecules even in adult fish. These marker molecules are required to guide the regenerating axons back to their retinotopic home territory within the tectum.  相似文献   

5.
At various times after unilateral division of the optic nerve in the frogRana temporaria L. evoked potentials in response to electrical stimulation of the optic nerve were investigated in a segment distal to the site of operation, spike activity was recorded from endings of regenerating and intertectal axons when stimuli of different shapes were placed in the field of vision, and the distribution of axonal bulbs of growth by depth in the tectum mesencephal was studied electron-microscopically. During regeneration of the axons the responses of the retinal ganglionic cells to visual stimuli retained most of their individual features. Myelinated axons of the retinal ganglionic cells regenerate first (starting on the 21st day after operation). Myelination of these fibers lags significantly behind their growth and is complete more than 100 days after the operation. Unmyelinated axons of the retinal ganglionic cells grow up toward the tectum mesencephali after myelinated axons (80 or more days after the operation). Axonal bulbs of growth in the initial periods after the operation are located close to the pial surface and the level of spread of the myelinated axons of the retinal ganglionic cells differs significantly from their normal level of localization. Intertectal connections persist after division of the nerve and are activated by visual stimuli during regeneration of the axons of the retinal ganglionic cells. Connections were found mainly between intertectal fibers terminating superficially and retinal ganglionic cells belonging to class 1 and 2 detectors. Axons of the retinal ganglionic cells grow up toward the caudal region of the tectum mesencephali later than toward the rostral region.A. N. Severtsov Institute of Evolutionary Morphology and Ecology of Animals, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 5, No. 6, pp. 611–620, November–December, 1973.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The retinal projections inEsox niger, as determined with the aid of a modified cobalt-lysine method, are considerably more extensive in the diencephalon and pretectum than in other teleost fishes so far examined. Although most retinal axons terminate contralaterally, rare fibers can be traced to the same aggregates ipsilaterally. The retinohypothalamic projection appears larger than hitherto reported in teleosts, and the dorsomedial optic tract issues fibers to a series of cell clusters extending from the rostral thalamus to mid-torus levels. A retinal projection to a presumed ventrolateral optic nucleus (VLO) is described for the first time in a teleost. Other targets of retinal fibers include the nucleus geniculatus lateralis ipse of Meader (GLI), the pretectal nucleus (P), the cortical nucleus and a well-developed ventromedial optic nucleus (VMO). The projection to the optic tectum is principally to the stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale (SFGS) and stratum marginale (SM), but a considerable number of axons also course through the stratum album centrale (SAC) before terminating there or piercing the stratum griseum centrale (SGC) and terminating in SFGS. Rare terminal arborizations of retinal fibers were also observed in stratum griseum centrale (SGS) and in the stratum griseum periventriculare (SGC) in restricted portions of the tectum. Because of the relatively large size of the visual structures inE. niger it is a potentially useful model for future experimental studies on the visual system.  相似文献   

7.
Neurofilaments are an important structural component of the axonal cytoskeleton and are made of neuronal intermediate filament (nIF) proteins. During axonal development, neurofilaments undergo progressive changes in molecular composition. In mammals, for example, highly phosphorylated forms of the middle- and high-molecular-weight neurofilament proteins (NF-M and NF-H, respectively) are characteristic of mature axons, whereas nIF proteins such as α-internexin are typical of young axons. Such changes have been proposed to help growing axons accommodate varying demands for plasticity and stability by modulating the structure of the axonal cytoskeleton. Xefiltin is a recently discovered nIF protein of the frog Xenopus laevis, whose nervous system has a large capacity for regeneration and plasticity. By amino acid identity, xefiltin is closely related to two other nIF proteins, α-internexin and gefiltin. α-Internexin is found principally in embryonic axons of the mammalian brain, and gefiltin is expressed primarily in goldfish retinal ganglion cells and has been associated with the ability of the goldfish optic nerve to regenerate. Like gefiltin in goldfish, xefiltin in Xenopus is the most abundantly expressed nIF protein of mature retinal ganglion cells. In the present study, we used immunocytochemistry to study the distribution of xefiltin during optic nerve development and regeneration. During development, xefiltin was found in optic axons at stage 35/36, before they reach the tectum at stage 37/38. Similarly, after an orbital crush injury, xefiltin first reemerged in optic axons after the front of regeneration reached the optic chiasm, but before it reached the tectum. Thus, during both development and regeneration, xefiltin was present within actively growing optic axons. In addition, aberrantly projecting retinoretinal axons expressed less xefiltin than those entering the optic tract, suggesting that xefiltin expression is influenced by interactions between regenerating axons and cells encountered along the visual pathway. These results support the idea that changes in xefiltin expression, along with those of other nIF proteins, modulate the structure and stability of actively growing optic axons and that this stability is under the control of the pathway which growing axons follow. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 33: 811–824, 1997  相似文献   

8.
Little is known about the cues that guide retinal axons across the diencephalon en route to their midbrain target, the optic tectum. Here we show that chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans are differentially expressed within the diencephalon at a time when retinal axons are growing within the optic tract. Using exposed brain preparations, we show that the addition of exogenous chondroitin sulfate results in retinal pathfinding errors. Retinal axons disperse widely from their normal trajectory within the optic tract and extend aberrantly into inappropriate regions of the forebrain. Time-lapse analysis of retinal growth cone dynamics in vivo shows that addition of exogenous chondroitin sulfate causes intermittent stalling and increases growth cone complexity. These results suggest that chondroitin sulfate may modulate the guidance of retinal axons as they grow through the diencephalon towards the optic tectum.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The optic tectum in birds receives visual information from the contralateral retina. This information is passed through to other brain areas via the deep layers of the optic tectum. In the present study the crossed tectobulbar pathway is described in detail. This pathway forms the connection between the optic tectum and the premotor area of craniocervical muscles in the contralateral paramedian reticular formation. It originates predominantly from neurons in the ventromedial part of stratum griseum centrale and to a lesser extent from stratum album centrale. The fibers leave the tectum as a horizontal fiber bundle, and cross the midline through the caudal radix oculomotorius and rostral nucleus oculomotorius. On the contralateral side fibers turn to ventral and descend caudally in the contralateral paramedian reticular formation to the level of the obex. Labeled terminals are found in the ipsilateral medial mesencephalic reticular formation lateral to the radix and motor nucleus of the oculomotor nerve, and in the contralateral paramedian reticular formation, along the descending tract. Neurons in the medial mesencephalic reticular formation in turn project to the paramedian reticular formation. Through the crossed tectobulbar pathway visual information can influence the activity of craniocervical muscles via reticular premotor neurons.  相似文献   

11.
In the embryonic visual system, EphA receptors are expressed on both temporal and nasal retinal ganglion cell axons. Only the temporal axons, however, are sensitive to the low concentrations of ephrin-A ligands found in the anterior optic tectum. The poor responsiveness of nasal axons to ephrin-A ligands, which allows them to traverse the anterior tectum and reach their targets in the posterior tectum, has been attributed to constitutive activation of the EphA4 receptor expressed in these axons. EphA4 is highly expressed throughout the retina, but is preferentially phosphorylated on tyrosine (activated) in nasal retina. In a screen for EphA4 ligands expressed in chicken embryonic retina, we have identified a novel ephrin, ephrin-A6. Like ephrin-A5, ephrin-A6 has high affinity for EphA4 and activates this receptor in cultured retinal cells. In the embryonic day 8 (E8) chicken visual system, ephrin-A6 is predominantly expressed in the nasal retina and ephrin-A5 in the posterior tectum. Thus, ephrin-A6 has the properties of a ligand that activates the EphA4 receptor in nasal retinal cells. Ephrin-A6 binds with high affinity to several other EphA receptors as well and causes growth cone collapse in retinal explants, demonstrating that it can elicit biological responses in retinal neurons. Ephrin-A6 expression is high at E6 and E8, when retinal axons grow to their tectal targets, and gradually declines at later developmental stages. The asymmetric distribution of ephrin-A6 in retinal cells, and the time course of its expression, suggest that this new ephrin plays a role in the establishment of visual system topography.  相似文献   

12.
A fundamental issue in central nervous system development regards the effect of target tissue on the differentiation of innervating neurons. We address this issue by characterizing the role the retinal ganglion cell target, i.e., the optic tectum, plays in regulating expression of tubulin and nicotinic acetylcholine receptor genes in regenerating retinal ganglion cells. Tubulins are involved in axonal growth, whereas nicotinic acetylcholine receptors mediate communication across synapses. Retinal ganglion cell axons were induced to regenerate by crushing the optic nerve. Following crush, there was a rapid increase in alpha-tubulin RNAs (3 days), which preceded the increase in nicotinic acetylcholine receptor RNAs (10-15 days). Both classes of RNAs approached control levels by the time retinotectal synapses and functional recovery were restored (4-6 weeks). If the optic nerve was repeatedly crushed or its target ablated, tubulin RNAs remained elevated, and the increase in receptor RNAs that would otherwise be seen 2 weeks after a single nerve crush did not occur. The interaction of retinal ganglion cell axons with their targets in the optic tectum appears, then, to exert a suppressive effect on the RNA encoding a cytoskeletal protein, tubulin, and an inductive effect on RNAs encoding nicotinic acetylcholine receptors involved in synaptic communication.  相似文献   

13.
Repulsive guidance molecule (RGM) is a recently identified protein implicated in both axonal guidance and neural tube closure. The avoidance of chick RGM in the posterior optic tectum by growing temporal, but not nasal, retinal ganglion cell axons is thought to contribute to visual map formation. In contrast to ephrins, semaphorins, netrins and slits, no receptor mechanism for RGM action has been defined. Here, an expression cloning strategy identified neogenin as a binding site for RGM, with a sub-nanomolar affinity. Consistent with selective axonal responsiveness to RGM, neogenin is expressed in a gradient across the chick retina. Neogenin is known to be one of several netrin-binding proteins but only neogenin interacts with RGM. The avoidance of RGM by temporal retinal axons is blocked by the anti-neogenin antibody and the soluble neogenin ectodomain. Dorsal root ganglion axons are unresponsive to RGM but are converted to a responsive state by neogenin expression. Thus, neogenin functions as an RGM receptor.  相似文献   

14.
Graded expression of the Eph receptor EphA3 in the retina and its two ligands, ephrin A2 and ephrin A5 in the optic tectum, the primary target of retinal axons, have been implicated in the formation of the retinotectal projection map. Two homeobox containing genes, SOHo1 and GH6, are expressed in a nasal-high, temporal-low pattern during early retinal development, and thus in opposing gradients to EphA3. Retroviral misexpression of SOHo1 or GH6 completely and specifically repressed EphA3 expression in the neural retina, but not in other parts of the central nervous system, such as the optic tectum. Under these conditions, some temporal ganglion cell axons overshot their expected termination zones in the rostral optic tectum, terminating aberrantly at more posterior locations. However, the majority of ganglion cell axons mapped to the appropriate rostrocaudal locations, although they formed somewhat more diffuse termination zones. These findings indicate that other mechanisms, in addition to differential EphA3 expression in the neural retina, are required for retinal ganglion axons to map to the appropriate rostrocaudal locations in the optic tectum. They further suggest that the control of topographic specificity along the retinal nasal-temporal axis is split into several independent pathways already at a very early time in development.  相似文献   

15.
Guided formation and extension of axons versus dendrites is considered crucial for structuring the nervous system. In the chick visual system, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) extend their axons into the tectum opticum, but not into glial somata containing retina layers. We addressed the question whether the different glia of retina and tectum opticum differentially affect axon growth. Glial cells were purified from retina and tectum opticum by complement-mediated cytolysis of non-glial cells. RGCs were purified by enzymatic delayering from flat mounted retina. RGCs were seeded onto retinal versus tectal glia monolayers. Subsequent neuritic differentiation was analysed by immunofluorescence microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. Qualitative and quantitative evaluation revealed that retinal glia somata inhibited axons. Time-lapse video recording indicated that axonal inhibition was based on the collapse of lamellipodia- and filopodia-rich growth cones of axons. In contrast to retinal glia, tectal glia supported axonal extension. Notably, retinal glia were not inhibitory for neurons in general, because in control experiments axon extension of dorsal root ganglia was not hampered. Therefore, the axon inhibition by retinal glia was neuron type-specific. In summary, the data demonstrate that homotopic (retinal) glia somata inhibit axonal outgrowth of RGCs, whereas heterotopic (tectal) glia of the synaptic target area support RGC axon extension. The data underscore the pivotal role of glia in structuring the developing nervous system.  相似文献   

16.
The topographic positioning of retinal axons in the optic tectum is regulated, at least in part, by ephrinA/EphA repulsive interactions. Temporal axons, expressing high levels of EphA receptors, project to the ephrinA5‐poor anterior tectum and avoid the ephrinA5‐rich posterior tectum. To examine the dynamic behavior of temporal growth cones when they first encounter ephrinA, we manipulated ephrinA‐coated beads with a laser tweezer into desired positions around the growth cones of chick retinal axons in culture. At high concentrations of ephrinA5 on the beads, growth cones typically collapsed on contacting the bead. At low concentrations, however, growth cones showed heterogeneous responses with some growth cones showing repulsive turning and others showing attractive turning after contacting the bead. Experiments with two beads indicate that retinal axons integrate guidance information that is provided simultaneously at two discrete locations. When a time‐delay was introduced between exposure to the first and the second bead, individual axons exhibited a stereotyped response to the repeated stimuli, either responding with attraction followed by attraction, or showing repulsion followed by repulsion or collapse. Our results suggest the existence of at least two retinal subpopulations from the temporal retina, one being attracted, another being repelled by low levels of ephrinA5. These findings demonstrate that temporal retinal axons are not universally repelled by ephrinA5 and suggest that their ability to respond differentially to low concentrations may help them to map in a continuous manner over the surface of the anterior tectum. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol, 2005  相似文献   

17.
The topographic positioning of retinal axons in the optic tectum is regulated, at least in part, by ephrinA/EphA repulsive interactions. Temporal axons, expressing high levels of EphA receptors, project to the ephrinA5-poor anterior tectum and avoid the ephrinA5-rich posterior tectum. To examine the dynamic behavior of temporal growth cones when they first encounter ephrinA, we manipulated ephrinA-coated beads with a laser tweezer into desired positions around the growth cones of chick retinal axons in culture. At high concentrations of ephrinA5 on the beads, growth cones typically collapsed on contacting the bead. At low concentrations, however, growth cones showed heterogeneous responses with some growth cones showing repulsive turning and others showing attractive turning after contacting the bead. Experiments with two beads indicate that retinal axons integrate guidance information that is provided simultaneously at two discrete locations. When a time-delay was introduced between exposure to the first and the second bead, individual axons exhibited a stereotyped response to the repeated stimuli, either responding with attraction followed by attraction, or showing repulsion followed by repulsion or collapse. Our results suggest the existence of at least two retinal subpopulations from the temporal retina, one being attracted, another being repelled by low levels of ephrinA5. These findings demonstrate that temporal retinal axons are not universally repelled by ephrinA5 and suggest that their ability to respond differentially to low concentrations may help them to map in a continuous manner over the surface of the anterior tectum.  相似文献   

18.
Cell adhesion molecules play a central role in mediating axonal tract development within the nascent nervous system. NF-protocadherin (NFPC), a member of the non-clustered protocadherin family, has been shown to regulate retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axon and dendrite initiation, as well as influencing axonal navigation within the mid-optic tract. However, whether NFPC mediates RGC axonal behaviour at other positions within the optic pathway remains unclear. Here we report that NFPC plays an important role in RGC axonogenesis, but not in intraretinal guidance. Moreover, axons with reduced NFPC levels exhibit insensitivity to Netrin-1, an attractive guidance cue expressed at the optic nerve head. Netrin-1 induces rapid turnover of NFPC localized to RGC growth cones, suggesting that the regulation of NFPC protein levels may underlie Netrin-1-mediated entry of RGC axons into the optic nerve head. At the tectum, we further reveal a function for NFPC in controlling RGC axonal entry into the final target area. Collectively, our results expand our understanding of the role of NFPC in RGC guidance and illustrate that this adhesion molecule contributes to axon behaviour at multiple points in the optic pathway.  相似文献   

19.
In the zebrafish retinotectal system, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) project topographically along anterior-posterior (A-P) and dorsal-ventral (D-V) axes to innervate their primary target, the optic tectum. In the nevermind (nev) mutant, D-V positional information is not maintained by dorsonasal retinal axons as they project through the optic tract to the tectum. Here we present a detailed phenotypic analysis of the retinotectal projection in nev and show that dorsonasal axons do eventually find their correct location on the tectum, albeit after taking a circuitous path. Interestingly, nev seems to be specifically required for retinal axons but not for several non-retinal axon tracts. In addition, we find that nev is required both cell autonomously and cell nonautonomously for proper lamination of the retina. We show that nev encodes Cyfip2 (Cytoplasmic FMRP interacting protein 2) and is thus the first known mutation in a vertebrate Cyfip family member. Finally, we show that CYFIP2 acts cell autonomously in the D-V sorting of dorsonasal RGC axons in the optic tract. CYFIP2 is a highly conserved protein that lacks known domains or structural motifs but has been shown to interact with Rac and the fragile-X mental retardation protein, suggesting intriguing links to cytoskeletal dynamics and RNA regulation.  相似文献   

20.
We screened for mutations affecting retinotectal axonal projection in Medaka, Oryzias latipes. In wild-type Medaka embryos, all the axons of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) project to the contralateral tectum, such that the topological relationship of the retinal field is maintained. We labeled RGC axons using DiI/DiO at the nasodorsal and temporoventral positions of the retina, and screened for mutations affecting the pattern of stereotypic projections to the tectum. By screening 184 mutagenized haploid genomes, seven mutations in five genes causing defects in axonal pathfinding were identified, whereas mutations affecting the topographic projection of RGC axons were not found. The mutants were grouped into two classes according to their phenotypes. In mutants of Class I, a subpopulation of the RGC axons branched out either immediately after leaving the eye or after reaching the midline, and this axonal subpopulation projected to the ipsilateral tectum. In mutants of Class II, subpopulations of RGC axons branched out after crossing the midline and projected aberrantly. These mutants will provide clues to understanding the functions of genes essential for axonal pathfinding, which may be conserved or partly divergent among vertebrates.  相似文献   

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