tyrosine hydroxylase immunocytochemistry
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Author(s):  
Jill K. Frey ◽  
Aileen Chen ◽  
R. David Heathcote

All cells of the spinal cord originate from the single layer of neuroepithelium that lines the central canal. Since the turn of the century, it has been known that a subclass of these ependymal cells can differentiate into neurons and extend cytoplasmic projections and cilia into the central canal. We have recently used tyrosine hydroxylase immunocytochemistry to identify a catecholaminergic subpopulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) contacting ependymal neurons in the developing spinal cord of the frog Xenopus laevis (Fig. 1). The interneurons are located in the floor plate region of the spinal cord and have axons that extend rostrally toward the hindbrain. During the morphogenesis of the catecholaminergic population of cells, two longitudinal columns gradually appear and then rapidly “converge” at the ventral midline. Transverse sections of embryonic spinal cord (see Fig. 1) showed that the cell bodies decreased in size and underwent changes in shape, number and position within the spinal cord.


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