| Literature DB >> 27013978 |
Melina Rapacioli1, Verónica Palma2, Vladimir Flores1.
Abstract
The central nervous system areas displaying the highest structural and functional complexity correspond to the so called cortices, i.e., concentric alternating neuronal and fibrous layers. Corticogenesis, i.e., the development of the cortical organization, depends on the temporal-spatial organization of several developmental events: (a) the duration of the proliferative phase of the neuroepithelium, (b) the relative duration of symmetric (expansive) versus asymmetric (neuronogenic) sub phases, (c) the spatial organization of each kind of cell division, (e) the time of determination and cell cycle exit and (f) the time of onset of the post-mitotic neuronal migration and (g) the time of onset of the neuronal structural and functional differentiation. The first five events depend on molecular mechanisms that perform a fine tuning of the proliferative activity. Changes in any of them significantly influence the cortical size or volume (tangential expansion and radial thickness), morphology, architecture and also impact on neuritogenesis and synaptogenesis affecting the cortical wiring. This paper integrates information, obtained in several species, on the developmental roles of cell proliferation in the development of the optic tectum (OT) cortex, a multilayered associative area of the dorsal (alar) midbrain. The present review (1) compiles relevant information on the temporal and spatial organization of cell proliferation in different species (fish, amphibians, birds, and mammals), (2) revises the main molecular events involved in the isthmic organizer (IsO) determination and localization, (3) describes how the patterning installed by IsO is translated into spatially organized neural stem cell proliferation (i.e., by means of growth factors, receptors, transcription factors, signaling pathways, etc.) and (4) describes the morpho- and histogenetic effect of a spatially organized cell proliferation in the above mentioned species. A brief section on the OT evolution is also included. This section considers how the differential operation of cell proliferation could explain differences among species.Entities:
Keywords: cell proliferation; corticogenesis; histogenesis; morphogenesis; patterning
Year: 2016 PMID: 27013978 PMCID: PMC4794495 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2016.00067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Sequence of developmental stages in the medaka embryo OT (Nguyen et al., 1999).
| Developmental stage | Principal events |
|---|---|
| DS22 | Tectal plate (OT primordium) formation |
| DS22–DS26 | The tectal plate enlarges uniformly. The entire NScs population proliferates at a similar rate |
| DS26–DS27 | A superficial post-mitotic zone (sz) appears at the cephalic and lateral zone of the tectal plate. The remaining structure retains proliferative activity |
| DS27–DS28 onward | Marginal proliferative zone (Mpz) formation. Proliferation retreats to a crescent-shaped zone along the OT periphery (medial, caudal, and lateral margins). This zone plays a crucial neuronogenic function |
| DS29–DS30 | Beginning of lamination. An external fibrous layer becomes apparent at the cephalic-lateral region. The Mpz is better defined |
| DS31 | Beginning of neuronal radial migration. Radially, migrating neurons invade the cephalic zone of the external (fibrous) layer. The radial migration and differentiation progress along a cephalic-lateral→caudal-medial spatial gradient. The most differentiated area is the cephalic-lateral pole |
| DS39 (hatching) | The layers of the adult OT (central zone (cz), superficial zone (sz) and periventricular gray zone (pgz)) are distinguishable |
| Post-hatching | NS cells persist at the Mpz allowing a postnatal period of neuronogenesis. Proliferation gradually declines |
Sequence of positional changes underwent by ZHMDs and their corresponding morphogenetic effects (Rapacioli et al., 2012b).
| Step | Principal events |
|---|---|
| Step 0 | Mid-hind brain (M-H) isthmus and IsO formation. This process occurs before E2 (10–13 somites to 19–21 somites). The IsO cells organize around the cephalic-lateral border of the IsO node ( |
| Step 1 | Establishment of a mZHMD at the IsO zone. By E2, the zone of the IsO node transforms into the mZHMD ( |
| Step 2 | Dorsal midline elongation ( |
| Step 3 | The bZHMDs “move” cephalically and ventrally toward the central region of each hemitectum ( |
| Step 4 | Lateral expansion, Intertectal fissure formation and separation of the left and right OT hemispheres ( |
| Step 5 | Relative “displacement” of the bZHMDs toward the caudal region ( |
Relationship between time of origin, neuronal type, and radial position in the rat embryo SC.
Summary of signaling pathways and transcription factors involved in the temporal and spatial regulation of cell proliferation.
| Signaling pathways | Transcription factors | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Fgf8 | Specification | Id | Maintaining the proliferative status |
| Fgf15/19 | Inhibition of cell proliferation | Proneural TFs | Inhibition of cell proliferation |
| Wnt | Specification | NeuroD | Promotion of neuronal differentiation |
| Shh | Patterning (basal plate) | Pax7 | Specification |
| Notch | Maintaining the proliferative status | ||