Schwanzel-Fukuda M, Pfaff D W
Rockefeller University, Laboratory of Neurobiology and Behavior, New York, New York 10021.
Experientia. 1990 Sep 15;46(9):956-62. doi: 10.1007/BF01939389.
Over the years, investigators have noticed, in a wide variety of species of vertebrates, large numbers of cells migrating from the olfactory placode to the forebrain. These cells were considered to be Schwann cells or ganglion cells of the terminalis nerve. Recently, immunocytochemical localization studies have shown that many of these migrating cells contain luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), a brain peptide that regulates reproductive functions by evoking the release of luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone from the anterior pituitary gland. The origin of LHRH cells in the epithelium of the medial olfactory placode, their migration across the nasal septum and into the forebrain, with branches of the terminalis nerve, also a derivative of the medial part of the olfactory placode, has led to some interesting speculations, from evolutionary and physiological perspectives, about the origin of these cells and the role of the terminalis nerve in their migration.
多年来,研究人员在多种脊椎动物中都注意到,大量细胞从嗅基板迁移至前脑。这些细胞曾被认为是施万细胞或终神经的神经节细胞。最近,免疫细胞化学定位研究表明,这些迁移的细胞中有许多含有促黄体生成素释放激素(LHRH),这是一种脑肽,通过促使垂体前叶释放促黄体生成素和促卵泡激素来调节生殖功能。LHRH细胞起源于内侧嗅基板上皮,它们穿过鼻中隔并随着终神经的分支进入前脑,终神经也是嗅基板内侧部分的衍生物,这从进化和生理角度引发了一些关于这些细胞起源以及终神经在其迁移过程中作用的有趣推测。