13 research outputs found
Fine processes of Nestin-GFP-positive radial glia-like stem cells in the adult dentate gyrus ensheathe local synapses and vasculature.
Adult hippocampal neurogenesis relies on the activation of neural stem cells in the dentate gyrus, their division, and differentiation of their progeny into mature granule neurons. The complex morphology of radial glia-like (RGL) stem cells suggests that these cells establish numerous contacts with the cellular components of the neurogenic niche that may play a crucial role in the regulation of RGL stem cell activity. However, the morphology of RGL stem cells remains poorly described. Here, we used light microscopy and electron microscopy to examine Nestin-GFP transgenic mice and provide a detailed ultrastructural reconstruction analysis of Nestin-GFP-positive RGL cells of the dentate gyrus. We show that their primary processes follow a tortuous path from the subgranular zone through the granule cell layer and ensheathe local synapses and vasculature in the inner molecular layer. They share the ensheathing of synapses and vasculature with astrocytic processes and adhere to the adjacent processes of astrocytes. This extensive interaction of processes with their local environment could allow them to be uniquely receptive to signals from local neurons, glia, and vasculature, which may regulate their fate
Specific disruption of hippocampal mossy fiber synapses in a mouse model of familial Alzheimer's disease
10.1371/journal.pone.0084349PLoS ONE91e8434
Sparse force‑bearing bridges between neighboring synaptic vesicles
Most vesicles in the interior of synaptic terminals are clustered in clouds close to active zone regions of the plasma membrane
where exocytosis occurs. Electron-dense structures, termed bridges, have been reported between a small minority of pairs of
neighboring vesicles within the clouds. Synapsin proteins have been implicated previously, but the existence of the bridges
as stable structures in vivo has been questioned. Here we use electron tomography to show that the bridges are present but
less frequent in synapsin knockouts compared to wildtype. An analysis of distances between neighbors in wildtype tomograms indicated that the bridges are strong enough to resist centrifugal forces likely induced by fxation with aldehydes. The
results confrm that the bridges are stable structures and that synapsin proteins are involved in formation or stabilization