scholarly journals Neurogenesis and Neuronal Migration in the Neonatal Rat Forebrain Anterior Subventricular Zone Do Not Require GFAP-Positive Astrocytes

1999 ◽  
Vol 216 (2) ◽  
pp. 622-634 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alick K.T. Law ◽  
Viorica Pencea ◽  
Charles R. Buck ◽  
Marla B. Luskin
1999 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. R. Stewart ◽  
T. Zigova ◽  
M. B. Luskin

Stewart, R. R., T. Zigova, and M. B. Luskin. Potassium currents in precursor cells isolated from the anterior subventricular zone of the neonatal rat forebrain. J. Neurophysiol. 81: 95–102, 1999. The progenitor cells from the anterior part of the neonatal subventricular zone, the SVZa, are unusual in that, although they undergo division, they have a neuronal phenotype. To characterize the electrophysiological properties of the SVZa precursor cells, recordings were made of potassium and sodium currents from SVZa cells that were removed from postnatal day 0–1 rats and cultured for 1 day. The properties of the delayed rectifier and A-type potassium currents were described by classical Hodgkin and Huxley analyses of activation and inactivation. In addition, cells were assessed under current clamp for their ability to generate action potentials. The A-type potassium current ( I K(A)) was completely inactivated at a holding potential of −50 mV. The remaining potassium current resembled the delayed rectifier current ( I K(DR)) in that it was blocked by tetraethylammonium (TEA; IC50 4.1 mM) and activated and inactivated slowly compared with I K(A). The conductance-voltage ( G- V) curve revealed that G increased continuously from 0.2 nS at −40 mV to a peak of 2.6 nS at +10 or +20 mV, and then decreased for voltages above +30 mV. Activation time constants were largest at −40 mV (∼11 ms) and smallest at 100 mV (∼1.5 ms). The properties of I K(A) were studied in the presence of 20 mM TEA, to block I K(DR), and from a holding potential of −15 mV, to inactivate both I K(DR) and I K(A). I K(A) was then allowed to recover from inactivation to negative potentials during 200- to 800-ms pulses. Recovery from inactivation was fastest at −130 mV (∼21 ms) and slowest at −90 mV (∼135 ms). Inactivation was voltage independent from −60 to +60 mV with a time constant of ∼15 ms. At steady state, I K(A) was half inactivated at −90 mV. G K(A) increased from 0.2 nS at −60 mV to a peak of 2.4 nS at +40 mV. Finally, the activation time constants ranged from ∼1.9 ms at −50 mV to 0.7 ms at +60 mV. The properties of I K(A) resembled those of I K(A) found in differentiating cerebellar granule neurons. Most SVZa cells had sodium currents (28/32 cells). However, in current clamp 11 of 12 cells were incapable of generating action potentials from voltages of −30 to −100 mV, suggesting that the available current densities were too low to support excitability.


2005 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 600-606 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Ong ◽  
Jennifer M Plane ◽  
Jack M Parent ◽  
Faye S Silverstein

Development ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 128 (5) ◽  
pp. 689-702 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.B. Chambers ◽  
Y. Peng ◽  
H. Nguyen ◽  
N. Gaiano ◽  
G. Fishell ◽  
...  

The olfactory bulb, neocortex and archicortex arise from a common pool of progenitors in the dorsal telencephalon. We studied the consequences of supplying excess Notch1 signal in vivo on the cellular and regional destinies of telencephalic precursors using bicistronic replication defective retroviruses. After ventricular injections mid-neurogenesis (E14.5), activated Notch1 retrovirus markedly inhibited the generation of neurons from telencephalic precursors, delayed the emergence of cells from the subventricular zone (SVZ), and produced an augmentation of glial progeny in the neo- and archicortex. However, activated Notch1 had a distinct effect on the progenitors of the olfactory bulb, markedly reducing the numbers of cells of any type that migrated there. To elucidate the mechanism of the cell fate changes elicited by Notch1 signals in the cortical regions, short- and long-term cultures of E14.5 telencephalic progenitors were examined. These studies reveal that activated Notch1 elicits a cessation of proliferation that coincides with an inhibition of the generation of neurons. Later, during gliogenesis, activated Notch1 triggers a rapid cellular proliferation with a significant increase in the generation of cells expressing GFAP. To examine the generation of cells destined for the olfactory bulb, we used stereotaxic injections into the early postnatal anterior subventricular zone (SVZa). We observed that precursors of the olfactory bulb responded to Notch signals by remaining quiescent and failing to give rise to differentiated progeny of any type, unlike cortical precursor cells, which generated glia instead of neurons. These data show that forebrain precursors vary in their response to Notch signals according to spatial and temporal cues, and that Notch signals influence the composition of forebrain regions by modulating the rate of proliferation of neural precursor cells.


1992 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
pp. 571-579
Author(s):  
J.W. Fawcett ◽  
N. Fersht ◽  
L. Housden ◽  
M. Schachner ◽  
P. Pesheva

Axon growth in vitro may be inhibited by contact with oligodendrocytes, but most axons grow readily on the surface of astrocyte monolayers. Since both cell types are in close contact with one another in the damaged nervous system, we have examined the growth of axons on cultures which contain both astrocytes and oligodendrocytes. Cultures derived from neonatal rat forebrain develop with a monolayer of large flat astrocytes attached to the culture dish, and with many smaller cells of the oligodendrocyte lineage on their surface. Dorsal root ganglia placed on these cultures grow axons readily, the overall extent of growth being unaffected by the presence or absence of oligodendrocytes, many of which express galactocerebroside and the inhibitory molecule janusin. A previous set of experiments had shown that growth of these axons is inhibited by oligodendrocytes by themselves. Scanning electron microscopy coupled with silver-intensified immunostaining reveals that the axons grow on the surface of the astrocytic layer, underneath the oligodendrocytes, and are therefore in contact with both cell types as they grow. The presence of astrocytes therefore alters the results of axonal contact with oligodendrocytes.


Development ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 111 (4) ◽  
pp. 1061-1080 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Hardy ◽  
R. Reynolds

We have followed the development of the O-2A progenitor cell from the neonatal rat forebrain, both in dissociated cell culture and in cryostat sections, using immunocytochemical techniques employing a panel of antibodies that recognise the cells at different stages of their development. This included the monoclonal antibody LB1, which binds to the surface ganglioside GD3 expressed on O-2A progenitor cells. In secondary cultures enriched for O-2A progenitors maintained in a serum-free chemically defined medium, a large proportion of the cells are primed to differentiate into oligodendroglia and go on to express the oligodendroglial specific surface glycolipid galactocerebroside (GC) and then the myelin proteins CNP and MBP. However, a significant proportion of immature bipolar GD3+ cells remained after 6 days in secondary culture. It appears that not all the O-2A progenitors in our cultures differentiate immediately and some cells remain in an undifferentiated state and divide to replenish progenitor numbers. We have also identified in our cultures a small apolar GD3- cell, which when isolated differentiated into a GD3+ bipolar O-2A progenitor cell. We have termed this cell type a preprogenitor. The differentiation of this cell type into O-2A progenitors may be the source of the immature GD3+ cells present at the later stages of our secondary cultures. The proliferative profile of the cultures was studied using 5′bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation as an index of mitosis. Only the immature, bipolar O-2A progenitors were seen to divide at any time in serum-free culture. Neither the more mature multipolar O-2A cells nor the oligodendroglia were seen to divide. The developmental profile of the O-2A cells in the rat forebrain in vivo showed a largely similar progression to that in culture, with a time lag of at least 6 days between GD3 expression and the onset of myelination. BrdU incorporation studies in vivo also showed that the GD3+ progenitor cell is mitotic whereas the GC(+)-expressing oligodendroglia is not. We have shown that there are several significant alterations in the timing of antigen expression in both O-2A progenitors and oligodendroglia in vitro compared to that seen in vivo.


2009 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 742-755 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anahí Hurtado-Chong ◽  
María J. Yusta-Boyo ◽  
Eva Vergaño-Vera ◽  
Alessandro Bulfone ◽  
Flora de Pablo ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 461 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
James P. Kesby ◽  
Xiaoying Cui ◽  
Pauline Ko ◽  
John J. McGrath ◽  
Thomas H.J. Burne ◽  
...  

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