scholarly journals Author response: Radial glia regulate vascular patterning around the developing spinal cord

Author(s):  
Ryota L Matsuoka ◽  
Michele Marass ◽  
Avdesh Avdesh ◽  
Christian SM Helker ◽  
Hans-Martin Maischein ◽  
...  
eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryota L Matsuoka ◽  
Michele Marass ◽  
Avdesh Avdesh ◽  
Christian SM Helker ◽  
Hans-Martin Maischein ◽  
...  

Vascular networks surrounding individual organs are important for their development, maintenance, and function; however, how these networks are assembled remains poorly understood. Here we show that CNS progenitors, referred to as radial glia, modulate vascular patterning around the spinal cord by acting as negative regulators. We found that radial glia ablation in zebrafish embryos leads to excessive sprouting of the trunk vessels around the spinal cord, and exclusively those of venous identity. Mechanistically, we determined that radial glia control this process via the Vegf decoy receptor sFlt1: sflt1 mutants exhibit the venous over-sprouting observed in radial glia-ablated larvae, and sFlt1 overexpression rescues it. Genetic mosaic analyses show that sFlt1 function in trunk endothelial cells can limit their over-sprouting. Together, our findings identify CNS-resident progenitors as critical angiogenic regulators that determine the precise patterning of the vasculature around the spinal cord, providing novel insights into vascular network formation around developing organs.


2005 ◽  
Vol 207 (3) ◽  
pp. 241-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kieran W. McDermott ◽  
Denis S. Barry ◽  
Siobhan S. McMahon

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Madeline G Andrews ◽  
Lorenzo M del Castillo ◽  
Eliana Ochoa-Bolton ◽  
Ken Yamauchi ◽  
Jan Smogorzewski ◽  
...  

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.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandy Alvarez ◽  
Supraja G. Varadarajan ◽  
Samantha J. Butler

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