Gertz Caitlyn C, Kriegstein Arnold R
Department of Neurology and Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143, and Neuroscience Graduate Program, University of California, San Francisco, California 94158.
Department of Neurology and Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143, and
J Neurosci. 2015 Oct 21;35(42):14307-15. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2198-15.2015.
During mammalian neocortical development, newborn excitatory and inhibitory neurons must migrate over long distances to reach their final positions within the cortical plate. In the lissencephalic rodent brain, pyramidal neurons are born in the ventricular and subventricular zones of the pallium and migrate along radial glia fibers to reach the appropriate cortical layer. Although much less is known about neuronal migration in species with a gyrencephalic cortex, retroviral studies in the ferret and primate suggest that, unlike the rodent, pyramidal neurons do not follow strict radial pathways and instead can disperse horizontally. However, the means by which pyramidal neurons laterally disperse remain unknown. In this study, we identified a viral labeling technique for visualizing neuronal migration in the ferret, a gyrencephalic carnivore, and found that migration was predominantly radial at early postnatal ages. In contrast, neurons displayed more tortuous migration routes with a decreased frequency of cortical plate-directed migration at later stages of neurogenesis concomitant with the start of brain folding. This was accompanied by neurons migrating sequentially along several different radial glial fibers, suggesting a mode by which pyramidal neurons may laterally disperse in a folded cortex. These findings provide insight into the migratory behavior of neurons in gyrencephalic species and provide a framework for using nonrodent model systems for studying neuronal migration disorders.
Elucidating neuronal migration dynamics in the gyrencephalic, or folded, cortex is important for understanding neurodevelopmental disorders. Similar to the rodent, we found that neuronal migration was predominantly radial at early postnatal ages in the gyrencephalic ferret cortex. Interestingly, ferret neurons displayed more tortuous migration routes and a decreased frequency of radial migration at later ages coincident with the start of cortical folding. We found that ferret neurons use several different radial glial fibers as migratory guides, including those belonging to the recently described outer radial glia, suggesting a mechanism by which ferret neurons disperse laterally. It is likely that excitatory neurons horizontally disperse in other gyrencephalic mammals, including the primate, suggesting an important modification to the current model deduced primarily from the rodent.
在哺乳动物新皮质发育过程中,新生的兴奋性和抑制性神经元必须长距离迁移,以到达皮质板内的最终位置。在无脑回的啮齿动物大脑中,锥体神经元在大脑皮质的脑室区和脑室下区产生,并沿着放射状胶质纤维迁移,以到达适当的皮质层。尽管对于有脑回皮质的物种中神经元迁移的了解要少得多,但对雪貂和灵长类动物的逆转录病毒研究表明,与啮齿动物不同,锥体神经元并不遵循严格的放射状路径,而是可以水平分散。然而,锥体神经元横向分散的方式仍然未知。在这项研究中,我们确定了一种病毒标记技术,用于可视化雪貂(一种有脑回的食肉动物)中的神经元迁移,并发现出生后早期迁移主要是放射状的。相比之下,在神经发生后期,随着大脑折叠的开始,神经元显示出更曲折的迁移路径,向皮质板定向迁移的频率降低。这伴随着神经元沿着几条不同的放射状胶质纤维依次迁移, 这表明了一种锥体神经元可能在折叠皮质中横向分散的模式。这些发现为有脑回物种中神经元的迁移行为提供了见解,并为使用非啮齿动物模型系统研究神经元迁移障碍提供了框架。
阐明有脑回(即折叠)皮质中的神经元迁移动力学对于理解神经发育障碍很重要。与啮齿动物类似,我们发现在有脑回的雪貂皮质中,出生后早期神经元迁移主要是放射状的。有趣的是,雪貂神经元在后期显示出更曲折的迁移路径,并且随着皮质折叠的开始,放射状迁移的频率降低。我们发现雪貂神经元使用几种不同的放射状胶质纤维作为迁移导向,包括那些属于最近描述的外侧放射状胶质的纤维,这表明了雪貂神经元横向分散的一种机制。兴奋性神经元很可能在包括灵长类动物在内的其他有脑回的哺乳动物中水平分散,这表明对目前主要从啮齿动物推导出来的模型进行了重要修改。