A comparison of intermediate filament markers for presumptive astroglia in the developing rat neocortex: immunostaining against nestin reveals more detail, than GFAP or vimentin

2001 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mihály Kálmán ◽  
Béla M. Ajtai
Author(s):  
V. Kriho ◽  
H.-Y. Yang ◽  
C.-M. Lue ◽  
N. Lieska ◽  
G. D. Pappas

Radial glia have been classically defined as those early glial cells that radially span their thin processes from the ventricular to the pial surfaces in the developing central nervous system. These radial glia constitute a transient cell population, disappearing, for the most part, by the end of the period of neuronal migration. Traditionally, it has been difficult to definitively identify these cells because the principal criteria available were morphologic only.Using immunofluorescence microscopy, we have previously defined a phenotype for radial glia in rat spinal cord based upon the sequential expression of vimentin, glial fibrillary acidic protein and an intermediate filament-associated protein, IFAP-70/280kD. We report here the application of another intermediate filament-associated protein, IFAP-300kD, originally identified in BHK-21 cells, to the immunofluorescence study of radial glia in the developing rat spinal cord.Results showed that IFAP-300kD appeared very early in rat spinal cord development. In fact by embryonic day 13, IFAP-300kD immunoreactivity was already at its peak and was observed in most of the radial glia which span the spinal cord from the ventricular to the subpial surfaces (Fig. 1). Interestingly, from this time, IFAP-300kD immunoreactivity diminished rapidly in a dorsal to ventral manner, so that by embryonic day 16 it was detectable only in the maturing macroglial cells in the marginal zone of the spinal cord and the dorsal median septum (Fig. 2). By birth, the spinal cord was essentially immuno-negative for this IFAP. Thus, IFAP-300kD appears to be another differentiation marker available for future studies of gliogenesis, especially for the early stages of radial glia differentiation.


1988 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 332-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.J. Romijn ◽  
J.M. Ruijter ◽  
P.S. Wolters

1983 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 773-782 ◽  
Author(s):  
BW Connors ◽  
LS Benardo ◽  
DA Prince
Keyword(s):  

1997 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 1212-1221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heiko J. Luhmann ◽  
Thomas Kral

Luhmann, Heiko J. and Thomas Kral. Hypoxia-induced dysfunction in developing rat neocortex. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 1212–1221, 1997. Neocortical slices from young [postnatal day (P) 5–8], juvenile (P14–18), and adult (>P28) rats were exposed to long periods of hypoxia. Field potential (FP) responses to orthodromic synaptic stimulation, the extracellular DC potential, and the extracellular Ca2+concentration ([Ca2+]o] were measured simultaneously in layers II/III of primary somatosensory cortex. Hypoxia caused a 42 and 55% decrease in the FP response in juvenile and adult cortex, respectively. FP responses recorded in slices from young animals were significantly more resistant to oxygen deprivation as compared with the juvenile ( P < 0.01) and adult age group ( P < 0.001) and declined by only 3% in amplitude. In adult cortex, hypoxia elicited, after 7 ± 4.5 min (mean ± SD), a sudden anoxic depolarization (AD) with an amplitude of 14 ± 6 mV and a duration of 0.89 ± 0.28 min at half-maximal amplitude. Although the AD onset latency was significantly longer in P5–8 (12.5 ± 4.9 min, P < 0.001) and P14–18 (8.7 ± 3.2 min, P < 0.002) cortex, the amplitude and duration of the AD was larger in young (45.7 ± 7.6 mV, 2.19 ± 0.71 min, both P < 0.001) and juvenile animals (29.9 ± 9.1 mV, P < 0.001, 0.96 ± 0.26 min, P > 0.05) when compared with the adults. The hypoxia-induced [Ca2+]odecrease was significantly ( P < 0.002) larger in young cortex (1,115 ± 50 μM) as compared with the adult (926 ± 107 μM). Prolongation of hypoxia after AD onset for >5 min elicited in young and juvenile cortex a long-lasting AD with an amplitude of 40.5 mV associated with a decrease in [Ca2+]oby >1 mM. On reoxygenation, only slices from these age groups showed spontaneous repetitive spreading depression in 3 out of 26 cases. In adults, the same protocol caused a significantly ( P < 0.05) smaller and shorter AD and never a spreading depression. However, recovery in synaptic transmission after this long-term hypoxia was better in young and juvenile cortex, indicating a prolonged or even irreversible deficiency in synaptic function in mature animals. Application of ketamine caused a 49% reduction in the initial amplitude of the AD in juvenile cortex but did not significantly affect the AD in slices from adult animals. These data indicate that the young and juvenile cortex tolerates much longer periods of oxygen deprivation as compared with the adult, but that a sufficiently long hypoxia causes severe pathophysiological activity in the immature cortex. This enhanced sensitivity of the immature cortex is at least partially mediated by activation of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors.


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