scholarly journals Cerebellar nuclei neurons dictate cortical growth through developmental scaling of presynaptic Purkinje cells

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan T. Willett ◽  
Alexandre Wojcinski ◽  
N. Sumru Bayin ◽  
Zhimin Lao ◽  
Daniel Stephen ◽  
...  

AbstractEfficient function of neural systems requires the production of specific cell types in the correct proportions. Here we report that reduction of the earliest born neurons of the cerebellum, excitatory cerebellar nuclei neurons (eCN), results in a subsequent reduction in growth of the cerebellar cortex due to an accompanying loss of their presynaptic target Purkinje cells. Conditional knockout of the homeobox genes En1 and En2 (En1/2) in the rhombic lip-derived eCN and granule cell precursors leads to embryonic loss of a subset of medial eCN and cell non-autonomous and location specific loss of Purkinje cells, with subsequent proportional scaling down of cortex growth. We propose that subsets of eCN dictate the survival of their specific Purkinje cell partners, and in turn sonic hedgehog secreted by Purkinje cells scales the expansion of granule cells and interneurons to produce functional local circuits and the proper folded morphology of the cerebellum.

eLife ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan T Willett ◽  
N Sumru Bayin ◽  
Andrew S Lee ◽  
Anjana Krishnamurthy ◽  
Alexandre Wojcinski ◽  
...  

For neural systems to function effectively, the numbers of each cell type must be proportioned properly during development. We found that conditional knockout of the mouse homeobox genes En1 and En2 in the excitatory cerebellar nuclei neurons (eCN) leads to reduced postnatal growth of the cerebellar cortex. A subset of medial and intermediate eCN are lost in the mutants, with an associated cell non-autonomous loss of their presynaptic partner Purkinje cells by birth leading to proportional scaling down of neuron production in the postnatal cerebellar cortex. Genetic killing of embryonic eCN throughout the cerebellum also leads to loss of Purkinje cells and reduced postnatal growth but throughout the cerebellar cortex. Thus, the eCN play a key role in scaling the size of the cerebellum by influencing the survival of their Purkinje cell partners, which in turn regulate production of granule cells and interneurons via the amount of sonic hedgehog secreted.


Author(s):  
R.V.W. Dimlich ◽  
M.H. Biros

Although a previous study in this laboratory determined that Purkinje cells of the rat cerebellum did not appear to be damaged following 30 min of forebrain ischemia followed by 30 min of reperfusion, it was suggested that an increase in rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and/or polysomes had occurred in these cells. The primary objective of the present study was to morphometrically determine whether or not this increase had occurred. In addition, since there is substantial evidence that glial cells may be affected by ischemia earlier than other cell types, glial cells also were examined. To ascertain possible effects on other cerebellar components, granule cells and neuropil near Purkinje cells as well as neuropil in the molecular layer also were evaluated in this investigation.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Congyao Zha ◽  
Carole A Farah ◽  
Vladimir Fonov ◽  
David A. Rudko ◽  
Wayne S Sossin

AbstractPurposeThe non-classical Small Optic Lobe (SOL) family of calpains are intracellular cysteine proteases that are expressed in the nervous system and appear to play an important role in neuronal development in both Drosophila, where loss of this calpain leads to the eponymous small optic lobes, and in mouse and human, where loss of this calpain (Capn15) leads to eye anomalies. However, the brain regions where this calpain is expressed and the areas most affected by the loss of this calpain have not been carefully examined.ProceduresWe utilize an insert strain where lacZ is expressed under the control of the Capn15 promoter, together with immunocytochemistry with markers of specific cell types to address where Capn 15 is expressed in the brain. We use small animal MRI comparing WT, Capn15 knockout and Capn15 conditional knockout mice to address the brain regions that are affected when Capn 15 is not present, either in early development of the adult.ResultsCapn15 is expressed in diverse brain regions, many of them involved in plasticity such as the hippocampus, lateral amygdala and Purkinje neurons. Capn15 knockout mice have smaller brains, and present specific deficits in the thalamus and hippocampal regions. There are no deficits revealed by MRI in brain regions when Capn15 is knocked out after development.ConclusionsAreas where Capn15 is expressed in the adult are not good markers for the specific regions where the loss of Capn15 specifically affects brain development. Thus, it is likely that this calpain plays distinct roles in brain development and brain plasticity.


The cerebellum, the deep cerebellar nuclei, and the inferior olivary nucleus of the heterozygote Lurcher mutant mouse have been compared with the same structures in normal littermates. The comparison was made using light and electron microscopic methods for qualitative observations and light microscopic methods for quantitative observations. The study included the newborn period from 4 days of age up to 730 days, which is old age for a mouse. The cerebellum of the normal mouse is similar to that of many other species though apparently minor structural differences are seen. Amongst these was the similarity between the mouse climbing fibre and mossy fibre glomeruli which contrasts with the rat where they can be distinguished by the high density of synaptic vesicles and central cluster of mitochondria in the climbing fibres. In Golgi stained material the inferior olivary nucleus of the normal mouse showed cells with highly ramified dendrites and cells with simple dendrite patterns. In the adult Lurcher mouse the cerebellum is much smaller than is normal. There are no Purkinje cells and the internal granule cell layer is reduced in thickness and density. Examination of younger animals shows that Purkinje cells are present and that they undergo degeneration. In Golgi stained material from younger animals Purkinje cells often show more than one primary dendrite, sometimes as many as five, and somatic spines persist well beyond the first week of life. Cytoplasmic organelles often have a random orientation and the mitochondria are rounded rather like those seen in the nervous mutant. Granule cells in the adult Lurcher mutant are reduced in number and during the developmental period degenerative changes are seen. The Golgi cells and stellate cells are relatively normal and some cells, identified as basket cells, are seen. The inferior olivary nucleus is found with ease in the Lurcher mutant and is as extensive as in the normal mouse. However, in Golgi stained material only cells with highly ramified dendrites are seen. In addition the total number of neurons is reduced. It is possible that the neurons with a simple dendrite pattern have climbing fibres which pass only to the Purkinje cells. The deep cerebellar nuclei in the normal mouse cannot be separated easily into their three subdivisions, lateral, interpositus and medial. In the Lurcher mutant the neurons are of similar size to those of the normal mouse but they are crowded more closely together than is normal. In the Lurcher mutant as in the normal adult the neuronal cell bodies are covered with synapses and not with glial cells. Estimates of total cell numbers were made in order to obtain evidence about the time course of the development of the changes in structure and to make a detailed comparison between the normal mouse and the Lurcher mutant with respect to Purkinje cells, granule cells, olive neurons, and deep cerebellar nuclei neurons. In the normal mouse the mean number of Purkinje cells between 10 and 730 days was 177 000, s.d. ± 11600, n = 12. The number of granule cells probably reached a peak at about 17 days. At 26 days post-natal the number estimated was 27 million and at 730 days 28 million. The mean number of olive neurons between 14 and 730 days post-natal was 32700, s.d. ± 1900, 9; the mean number of deep cerebellar neurons counted at three adult ages was 17 600, s.d. ± 1800. In the adult the ratio of Purkinje cells to olive cells is ca . 5.4:1, of granule cells to Purkinje cells is ca. 170:1, of Purkinje cells to deep cerebellar nuclei neurons is 10:1, and of olive neurons to deep cerebellar nuclei neurons is 1.85:1. This last would chiefly be of interest if there are olive neurons projecting solely to deep cerebellar neurons. In the Lurcher mutant the number of Purkinje cells falls below normal from 8 days post-natally, reaches 10% of normal at 26 days and probably falls to zero at around 90 days. At this point such are the changes in the overall structure that confusion of Purkinje cells with Golgi cells may occur. At 4 days post-natal age the number of granule cells is smaller than normal by 25 % and this difference increases with age to a reduction of ca. 90 %. The number of olive cells is close to normal until 8 days of age, is only 60 % of normal at 15 days when the highest number is reached, and is 25 % of normal at 121 days. The deep cerebellar nuclei neuron numbers were the same as those in the normal. Included in the discussion is a detailed critical comparison of these results from the normal mouse with all previous estimates of cell numbers in the cerebellum. The lesion in Lurcher is compared with that found in the other mouse cerebellar mutants and with experimentally evoked lesions of the cerebellum. For the Lurcher mutant the tentative conclusion is that the primary lesion may arise in the Purkinje cells.


Development ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. 1277-1286 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.C. Salinas ◽  
C. Fletcher ◽  
N.G. Copeland ◽  
N.A. Jenkins ◽  
R. Nusse

Wnt genes encode secreted proteins implicated in cell fate changes during development. To define specific cell populations in which Wnt genes act, we have examined Wnt expression in the cerebellum. This part of the brain has a relatively simple structure and contains well-characterized cell populations. We found that Wnt-3 is expressed during development of the cerebellum and that expression is restricted to the Purkinje cell layer in the adult. Wnt-3 expression in Purkinje cells increases postnatally as granule cells start to make contacts with Purkinje cells. To investigate whether interactions with granule cells influence Wnt-3 expression in Purkinje cells, we examined gene expression in several mouse mutants, using the expression of En-2 to follow the fate of granule cells. In the weaver mutant, in which granule cells fail to migrate and subsequently die in the external granular layer, Wnt-3 expression was normal at postnatal day 15 (P15). At that time, some granule cells are still present in the external granular layer. At P28, however, when granule cells could no longer be detected, Wnt-3 expression was almost absent. In the meander tail mutant, in which the anterior cerebellar lobes lack granule cells, Wnt-3 expression was only detected in the normal posterior lobes. Since En genes are implicated in cell-cell interactions mediated by Wnt genes, we examined En-2/En-2 mutant mice, finding normal Wnt-3 expression, indicating that the effect of granule cells on the maintenance of Wnt-3 is not mediated by En-2. Our results show that Wnt-3 expression in Purkinje cells is modulated by their presynaptic granule cells at the time of neuronal maturation.


Author(s):  
Karel Svoboda ◽  
Jianing Yu

Over the past two decades, the barrel cortex has emerged as a major model system for the analysis of the structure, function, and experience-dependent plasticity of neocortical circuits. Driven by the availability of transgenic animals expressing fluorescent proteins and protein effectors in specific cell types, circuit studies of the barrel cortex are now mostly performed in mice. The cortical layers, cell types, and the intralaminar connectivity are similar in mice and rats. This chapter combines information gained from experiments in both species, but all quantitative data pertain to the mouse barrel cortex. We summarize current knowledge about the inputs, outputs and local circuits of the barrel cortex. Special emphasis is placed on the structure and function of layer 4, which may currently be the best understood cortical circuit. Circuit principles derived from layer 4 likely apply to cortical circuits in general.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saša Jereb ◽  
Hun-Way Hwang ◽  
Eric Van Otterloo ◽  
Eve-Ellen Govek ◽  
John J. Fak ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAlternative polyadenylation (APA) regulates mRNA translation, stability, and protein localization. However, it is unclear to what extent APA regulates these processes uniquely in specific cell types. Using a new technique, cTag-PAPERCLIP, we discovered significant differences in APA between the principal types of mouse cerebellar neurons, the Purkinje and granule cells, as well as between proliferating and differentiated granule cells. Transcripts that differed in APA in these comparisons were enriched in key neuronal functions and many differed in coding sequence in addition to 3’UTR length. We characterize Memo1, a transcript that shifted from expressing a short 3’UTR isoform to a longer one during granule cell differentiation. We show that Memo1 regulates granule cell precursor proliferation and that its long 3’UTR isoform is targeted by miR-124, contributing to its downregulation during development. Our findings provide insight into roles for APA in specific cell types and establish a platform for further functional studies.


eLife ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saša Jereb ◽  
Hun-Way Hwang ◽  
Eric Van Otterloo ◽  
Eve-Ellen Govek ◽  
John J Fak ◽  
...  

Alternative polyadenylation (APA) regulates mRNA translation, stability, and protein localization. However, it is unclear to what extent APA regulates these processes uniquely in specific cell types. Using a new technique, cTag-PAPERCLIP, we discovered significant differences in APA between the principal types of mouse cerebellar neurons, the Purkinje and granule cells, as well as between proliferating and differentiated granule cells. Transcripts that differed in APA in these comparisons were enriched in key neuronal functions and many differed in coding sequence in addition to 3’UTR length. We characterize Memo1, a transcript that shifted from expressing a short 3’UTR isoform to a longer one during granule cell differentiation. We show that Memo1 regulates granule cell precursor proliferation and that its long 3’UTR isoform is targeted by miR-124, contributing to its downregulation during development. Our findings provide insight into roles for APA in specific cell types and establish a platform for further functional studies.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maryam Rahimi-Balaei ◽  
Xiaodan Jiao ◽  
Fiona E. Parkinson ◽  
Behzad Yeganeh ◽  
Hassan Marzban

ABSTRACTDuring cerebellar development, cerebellar nuclei (CN) neurons and Purkinje cells are the earliest born among the different neuronal subtypes. Purkinje cells are the sole output of the cerebellar cortex and project to the CN. The CN represents the main output of the cerebellum, which is generated from the rhombic lip and the ventricular zone. We used immunohistochemistry, embryonic cultures, dye tracers and in situ hybridization to examine the origin of a new subset of CN neurons from the mesencephalon during early cerebellar development. Our results show that a subset of CN neurons, which are immunopositive for α-synuclein (SNCA) and Otx2, originate from the mesencephalon and cross the isthmus toward the rostral end of the nuclear transitory zone. Double immunostaining of the SNCA with Otx2 or p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75ntr) indicates that these cells are derived from neural crest cells. We also showed that this population of neurons with nerve fibers terminates at the subpial surface of putative lobules VI/VII. The SNCA+/Otx2+/p75+ cells, which divide the cerebellar primordium into rosterodorsal and caudoventral compartments, show increased cleaved caspase-3 activation, which suggests temporary presence of these cells due to apoptosis. These results strongly suggest that early CN neurons originate from the mesencephalic neural crest population and cross the isthmus to contribute as a subset of the CN. Their temporary presence in the nuclear transitory zone suggests that these neurons/fibers play a regulatory role as a signaling center to attract early afferent pioneer axons and provide neuronal migratory pathway during early cerebellar development.Significance StatementDuring cerebellar development two germinal zones are involved in cerebellar neurogenesis: the rhombic lip and the ventricular zone, which are located in the developing cerebellum itself. Our findings indicate that a subset of cerebellar nuclei neurons have an external origin, the mesencephalon, and they are the earliest born neurons that enter to the developing cerebellum. In this study, we focused on the origin of these cells and traced their migratory pathway from the mesencephalon while crossing the isthmus, followed them when they entered to the developing cerebellum. We also demonstrated their potential role on later born cells during cerebellar development.


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