16 research outputs found

    Modulators of axonal growth and guidance at the brain midline with special reference to glial heparan sulfate proteoglycans

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    Antibodies against the T61 antigen inhibit neuronal migration in the chick optic tectum.

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    Cell migration in the central nervous system depends, in part, on receptors and extracellular matrix molecules that likewise support axonal outgrowth. We have investigated the influence of T61, a monoclonal antibody that has been shown to inhibit growth cone motility in vitro, on neuronal migration in the developing optic tectum. Intraventricular injections of antibody-producing hybridoma cells or ascites fluid were used to determine the action of this antibody in an in vivo environment. To document alterations in tectal layer formation, a combination of cell-nuclei staining and axonal immunolabeling methods was employed. In the presence of T61 antibody, cells normally destined for superficial layers accumulated in the ventricular zone instead, leading to a reduction of the cell-dense layer in the tectal plate. Experiments with 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine labeling followed by antibody staining confirmed that the nonmigrating cells remaining in the ventricular zone were postmitotic and had differentiated. The structure of radial glial cells, as judged by staining with a glia-specific antibody and the fluorescent tracer 1,1'-dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (DiI), remained intact in these embryos. Our findings suggest that the T61 epitope is involved in a mechanism underlying axonal extension and neuronal migration, possibly by influencing the motility of the leading process

    Antibodies against the T61 antigen inhibit neuronal migration in the chick optic tectum.

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    Embryonic neurons as in vitro inducers of differentiation of nephrogenic mesenchyme

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    Nephrogenic mesenchyme differentiates into epithelium as a result of morphogenetic tissue interactions. In vivo, the ureter bud is thought to induce tubular differentiation of the mesenchyme. In vitro recombination experiments have shown that various embryonic tissues can act as inducers when put in close proximity to nephrogenic mesenchyme. Induction also occurs across a porous filter. In the present study we show that only a few embryonic tissues are potent inducers in transfilter cultures in which mesenchyme and inducing tissue are separated by a membrane filter. Of the tissues tested, only embryonic spinal cord and brain were effective, whereas the ureter bud did not induce. All tissues tested sent processes through the filter. Weak inducing capacity of embryonic tissues is thus not due to a failure of the cells to make contact with the mesenchyme. To analyze which cell type within the embryonic brain possesses inducing capacity, neurons were selectively removed from primary cultures of chick tectal cells by antibody and complement-mediated cell lysis. These cultures, consisting of glial and undifferentiated cells, were then recombined with nephrogenic mesenchyme. They proved to be ineffective in inducing tubulogenesis, whereas cell populations containing neurons retained their inducing capacity. In transfilter cultures, ingrowth of neuronal processes deep into the mesenchyme, as assayed by anti-neurofilament staining, occurred within the first 24 hr of culture. Thus, it is not the time needed for processes to grow through the filter, but the time needed to grow into the mesenchyme that corresponds to the minimal induction time. These studies suggest that embryonic neurons are the most effective inducers of nephrogenic mesenchyme in vitro. Differentiation may be triggered by neuronal processes that establish cell contacts deep within the mesenchyme. Neurons might be important for nephrogenesis in vivo as well, although we can present no direct evidence to support this idea, since we failed to detect neurons at early stages of kidney development when the first tubules are induced

    Avoidance of posterior tectal membranes by temporal retinal axons

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    Membrane carpets consisting of alternating membrane stripes were prepared from plasma membranes of anterior and posterior chick optic tectum. Axons from retinal explants extend neurites on these carpets. Axons of the nasal retina do not distinguish between the stripes. Axons of the temporal retina prefer to extend neurites on anterior tectal membranes. Treatment of the membrane fragments with high temperature interferes with the pattern of neurite outgrowth from temporal axons. When growing on carpets consisting of treated anterior and posterior tectal membranes, temporal retinal axons no longer distinguish between the stripes. Treatment of posterior membranes alone is sufficient to abolish the preference of temporal axons to extend neurites on anterior tectal membranes. Treatment of the anterior membranes alone has no effect. This result is best explained by a repulsive component in the posterior tectal membranes. Temporal, but not nasal, axons specifically recognize and avoid that component, with the result that they do not extend neurites on posterior tectal membrane stripes. Once the repulsive component is destroyed, temporal axons are able to extend neurites on posterior tectal membranes

    Specification of layer-specific connections in the developing cortex.

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    One of the basic tasks of neurobiology is to understand how the precision and specificity of neuronal connections is achieved during development. In this paper we reviewed some recent in vitro studies on the developing mammalian cerebral cortex that have been made towards this end. The results of these experiments provided evidence that membrane-associated molecules are instrumental for the formation of specific afferent and efferent cortical projections. Substrate-bound molecules guide growing axons towards their target, regulate the timing of thalamocortical innervation and mediate target cell recognition. Moreover, a newly described glycoprotein, defined by a monoclonal antibody, revealed a molecular heterogeneity in the developing white matter. Since this molecule has opposite effects on thalamic and cortical axons, it might play a role in the segregation of axons running to and from the cortex. Substrate-bound cues are important during the formation of local cortical circuits. In vitro assays demonstrated that molecular components confined to individual cortical layers control the laminar specificity of cortical axon branching. This suggests that similar developmental strategies contribute to the laminar specification of extrinsic and intrinsic cortical circuits. Thus substrate-bound molecules might provide the framework for subsequent activity-dependent mechanisms that control the elaboration of precise connections between the cortical columns. A major challenge ahead is to identify the factors that mediate these processes and to determine their mode of action. Recently, two families of proteins, the netrins and the semaphorins/collapsins, have been identified as growth cone signals in the developing spinal cord (reviewed in Goodman, 1994; Colamarino and Tessier-Lavigne, 1995a; Dodd and Schuchardt, 1995; Kennedy and Tessier-Lavigne, 1995). Semaphorins/collapsins appear to regulate axonal guidance by repelling growth cones and by inhibiting axonal branching and synapse formation. Originally, netrins have been purified as diffusible chemoattractants for commissural axons of the dorsal spinal cord, but it is now well established that they can also function as chemorepellent factors for other classes of neurons. Since netrins are related to extracellular matrix components and since they can bind to the cell surface, they might also act as local guidance cues. A possible role of netrins and semaphorins/collapsins in the development of cortical connections is likely to be resolved in the near future. The identification of the factors that regulate specific branching patterns of cortical neurons might provide a better understanding of cortical development, but it might also be relevant to some aspects of plasticity and repair in the adult cortex

    Spatial arrangement of radial glia and ingrowing retinal axons in the chick optic tectum during development

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    Neuroanatomical tracing of retinal axons and axonal terminals with the fluorescent dye, DiI, was combined with immunohistochemical characterization of radial glial cells in the developing chick retinotectal system. Emphasis was placed on the mode of the tectal innervation by individual retinal axons and on the distribution and fate of the tectal radial glial cells and their spatial relation to retinal axons. It was obvious from fluorescent images obtained from anterogradely filled axons that these axons deserted the superficial stratum opticum (SO) to penetrate the stratum griseum et fibrosum superficiale (SGFS) by making right-angled turns within the SO. Frequently, axons which had invaded the SGFS were bifurcated and had a superficial branch which remained within the SO. Terminal axonal arborization occurred at various depths within the SGFS. Characterization of the tectal glial cells and their radial fibers by means of the anti-filament antibody, R5, and post-mortem staining with the fluorescent dye, DiI, revealed the following. (a) At least from day E8 to P1, tectal glial fibers traversed all tectal layers from the periventricular location of their somata to the superficial interface between SO and pia mater. In this interface they enlarged and formed characteristic endfeet. (b) Glial endfeet covered the whole tectal surface. They showed at early ages anterior-posterior differences having a higher density in the posterior tectum. These differences disappeared at embryonic day E13. (c) After innervation, glial endfeet of the anterior tectal third were arranged in rows parallel to the retinal fibers within the SO. This arrangement was not observed in eyeless embryos. (d) Radial glial fibers could be stained with R5 from day E8 to late embryonic stages throughout their entire length. (e) At the first posthatching days, only the segments of the radial glial fibers restricted to the thickness of the SO were R5-positive, although the fibers still traversed throughout the depth of the tectum. The results are discussed in context to the genesis of the retinotectal projection

    Antibodies to cell surface ganglioside GD3 perturb inductive epithelial-mesenchymal interactions

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    Most epithelial sheets emerge during embryogenesis by a branching and growth of the epithelium. The surrounding mesenchyme is crucial for this process. We report that branching morphogenesis and the formation of a new epithelium from the mesenchyme in the embryonic kidney can be blocked by a monoclonal antibody reacting with a surface glycolipid, disialoganglioside GD3. In contrast, a more than 10-fold excess of antibodies to adhesive glycoproteins (N-CAM, L-CAM, fibronectin) fails to inhibit morphogenesis. Although the anti-GD3 antibody affected epithelial development, the disialoganglioside GD3 was expressed not in the epithelium, but in the mesenchyme surrounding the developing epithelia. The data raise the intriguing possibility that the anti-GD3 antibody inhibits epithelial development by interfering with epithelial-mesenchymal interactions
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