Ultrastructural studies on cerebellar histogenesis in the frog: The external granular layer and the molecular layer

1978 ◽  
Vol 153 (3) ◽  
pp. 435-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amos G. Gona
2020 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 473-482
Author(s):  
Ivan Capo ◽  
Ivan Milenkovic ◽  
Natasa Capo ◽  
Nebojsa Stilinovic ◽  
Sasa Vukmirovic ◽  
...  

The most sensitive period in brain development is during prenatal life. The use of antibiotics in pregnancy is still controversial. Recent studies revealed the high neurotoxic potential of the antibiotic and antiprotozoal medication, metronidazole. However, there are insufficient data from animal studies about prenatal treatment effects. We investigated the effect of prenatal treatment with metronidazole on cerebellar development in guinea pigs. Treatment with metronidazole was performed from the 42nd to the 49th day of gestation. On the 50th day of pregnancy, all dams were killed, and the cerebella of the fetuses were analyzed. Gross cerebellar changes characterized by malposition of the folia with partial atrophy were found in 12 of 19 fetuses in the experimental group, but in none of 20 control fetuses that received saline. The most affected were folia VII with depletion of the areal fraction of the external granular layer, molecular layer and the internal granular layer. Purkinje cells displayed cell distortion with loss of normal dendritic polarity. The investigation revealed cell depletion, with a disturbance of the cytoarchitectonic of the cerebellar cortex and folia alteration.


Development ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 108 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.E. Hallonet ◽  
M.A. Teillet ◽  
N.M. Le Douarin

We have used the quail-chick chimera system to reveal the cell migrations and settling pattern involved in the construction of the cerebellum. Three types of orthotopic transplantations were carried out, between quail and chick embryos, at the 12-somite stage: exchanges of (i) the whole metencephalic vesicle, (ii) the lateral half of this vesicle and (iii) the diencephalic plus the mesencephalic vesicles. Histological study of chimeric embryos and young chicks provided the following results: longitudinal morphogenetic movements distort the embryonic neural tube as early as the fifth embryonic day, so that the dorsal limit of the mes-, met- and myelencephalic vesicles are displaced caudad and their ventral limits rostrad. This leads to a participation of mesencephalic vesicular material in the construction of the cerebellum. Cells originating in the mesencephalic vesicle are found in a rostromedial V-shaped region, in all the cerebellar cellular layers, except the external granular layer, the presumptive territory of which is entirely located in the metencephalic vesicle. The chimerism of the rostromedial part of the cerebellum allows the analysis of the origin of the various cerebellar cell types. We find (i) that the Purkinje cells always have the same cellular marker as the ventricular epithelium radially beneath them. This strongly suggests that these cells reach their final localization following strictly radial migrations. (ii) Most of the small cells surrounding the Purkinje neurons and most of the neurons and glial cells of the molecular layer are also of the same type as the ventricular epithelium they surmount, i.e. different from the type of the external granular layer cells. Therefore, they are not derived from the external granular layer and are not of the same origin as the granule cells as previously believed. Unilateral substitutions of the metencephalic vesicle revealed that transverse cell migrations occur across the sagittal plane. They have been observed mainly in the inner and external granular layers, but also, though to a lesser extent, in the molecular layer and in the cell layer located at the level of the Purkinje neurons. These observations show that the position of cerebellar cells is determined by both morphogenetic movements and cell type-specific active radial and tangential migrations. The quail-chick chimera system is thus able to provide new information both on the origin of cerebellar cells and how each cell type assumes its final position.


2000 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. 994-1004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Marino ◽  
Marc Vooijs ◽  
Hanneke van der Gulden ◽  
Jos Jonkers ◽  
Anton Berns

Medulloblastomas are among the most common malignancies in childhood, and they are associated with substantial mortality and morbidity. The molecular pathogenesis as well as the ontogeny of these neoplasms is still poorly understood. We have generated a mouse model for medulloblastoma by Cre–LoxP-mediated inactivation ofRb and p53 tumor suppressor genes in the cerebellar external granular layer (EGL) cells. GFAP–Cre-mediated recombination was found both in astrocytes and in immature precursor cells of the EGL in the developing cerebellum.GFAP–Cre;RbLoxP/LoxP;p53−/−or LoxP/LoxP mice developed highly aggressive embryonal tumors of the cerebellum with typical features of medulloblastoma. These tumors were identified as early as 7 weeks of age on the outer surface of the molecular layer, corresponding to the location of the EGL cells during development. Our results demonstrate that loss of function of RB is essential for medulloblastoma development in the mouse and strongly support the hypothesis that medulloblastomas arise from multipotent precursor cells located in the EGL.


1987 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 331-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
C M Chuong ◽  
K L Crossin ◽  
G M Edelman

We have correlated the times of appearance of the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM), the neuron-glia cell adhesion molecule (Ng-CAM), and the extracellular matrix protein, cytotactin, during the development of the chicken cerebellar cortex, and have shown that these molecules make different functional contributions to granule cell migration. Immunofluorescent staining showed distinct spatiotemporal expression sequences for each adhesion molecule. N-CAM was present at all times in all layers. However, the large cytoplasmic domain polypeptide of N-CAM was always absent from the external granular layer and was enriched in the molecular layer as development proceeded. Ng-CAM began to be expressed in the premigratory granule cells just before migration and later disappeared from cell bodies but remained on parallel fibers. Cytotactin, which is synthesized by glia and not by neurons, appeared first in a speckled pattern within the external granular layer and later appeared in a continuous pattern along the Bergmann glia; it was also enriched in the molecular layer. After we established their order of appearance, we tested the separate functions of these adhesion molecules in granule cell migration by adding specific antibodies against each molecule to cerebellar explant cultures that had been labeled with tritiated thymidine and then measuring the differential distribution of labeled cells in the forming layers. Anti-N-CAM showed marginal effects. In contrast, anti-Ng-CAM arrested most cells in the external granular layer, while anti-cytotactin arrested most cells in the molecular layer. Time course analyses combined with sequential addition of different antibodies in different orders showed that anti-Ng-CAM had a major effect in the early period (first 36 h in culture) and a lesser effect in the second part of the culture period, while anti-cytotactin had essentially no effect at the earlier time but had major effects at a later period (18-72 h in culture). The two major stages of cerebellar granule cell migration thus appear to be differentially affected by distinct adhesion molecules of different cellular origins, binding mechanisms, and overall distributions. The results indicated that local cell surface modulation of adhesion molecules of different specificities at defined stages and sites is essential to the formation of cerebellar cortical layers.


1967 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 277-287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Setsuya Fujita

The generation cycle of germinative cells (external matrix cells) in the external granular layer of the cerebellar cortex of the 10-to 11-day-old mouse was studied by radioautography following repeated injections of H3-thymidine. The generation time is 19 hr, presynthetic time 8.5 hr, DNA-synthetic time 8 hr, postsynthetic time 2 hr, and mitotic time 0.5 hr. These proliferating cells occupy the outer half of the external granular layer and make up the external matrix layer. Neuroblasts are differentiated from the external matrix cell, migrate out from the layer and accumulate in the inner half of the external granular layer to form the external mantle layer. The transit time of the neuroblasts in the external mantle layer is 28 hr. Thereafter, they migrate farther into the molecular layer and the internal granular layer. By means of long-term cumulative labeling, the rate of daily production of neuroblasts from the external matrix cell is studied in quantitative terms. It becomes clear that the entire population of the inner granule neurons arises postnatally in the external granular layer between 1 and 18 days of age and that 95% of them is produced between postnatal days 4 and 15. Finally, the fate of the cells in the external granular layer at its terminal stage was studied by marking the cells with H3-thymidine during 15–16 days of life and following their subsequent migration and developmental changes up to 21 days of life. Comparison of radioautographs taken before and after the migration disclosed that the external matrix cells give rise to a small number of neuroglia cells. This finding revealed their multipotential nature.


1987 ◽  
Vol 129 (4) ◽  
pp. 265-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Espinar ◽  
A. Quesada ◽  
M. Martinez-de-la-Torre ◽  
J.A. Armengol

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