| Literature DB >> 29511360 |
Abstract
The mammalian brain develops from a simple sheet of neuroepithelial cells into an incredibly complex structure containing billions of neurons with trillions of synapses. Understanding how intrinsic genetic programs interact with environmental cues to generate neuronal diversity and proper connectivity is one of the most daunting challenges in developmental biology. We recently explored this issue in forebrain GABAergic inhibitory interneurons, an extremely diverse population of neurons that are classified into distinct subtypes based on morphology, neurochemical markers, and electrophysiological properties. Immature interneurons were harvested from one brain region and transplanted into a different region, allowing us to assess how challenging cells in a new environment affected their fate. Do these grafted cells adopt characteristics of the host environment or retain features from the donor environment? We found that the proportion of interneuron subgroups is determined by the host region, but some interneuron subtypes maintain features attributable to the donor environment. In this commentary, I expound on potential mechanisms that could underlie these observations and explore the implications of these findings in a greater context of developmental neuroscience.Entities:
Keywords: Interneurons; development; migration; neuronal nitric oxide synthase; parvalbumin; somatostatin; transplantation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29511360 PMCID: PMC5833213 DOI: 10.1177/1179069518758656
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Neurosci ISSN: 1179-0695
Figure 1.Potential mechanisms to generate the spatial distribution of interneuron subtypes. To generate the mature distribution pattern of interneurons, distinct interneuron subtypes could be defined early during embryogenesis or postnatally after cells have migrated to their proper brain regions. If interneuron subtypes are defined early (as most evidence seems to support), then the proper spatial distribution could be obtained via “selective migration” to specific brain regions (top left) or diffuse migration followed by “selective survival” (or selective apoptotic cell death, bottom left). Alternatively, immature precursors could be initially fated into general cardinal classes (SST+, PV+, and nNOS+) and then undergo more definitive specification into specific subtypes on maturation with their environment (top right). Note the differential localization of nNOS+ cells (and type I/type II subtypes) between the cortex and the hippocampus. nNOS indicates neuronal nitric oxide synthase; SST, somatostatin; PV, parvalbumin.