| Literature DB >> 30127726 |
Carlos Arturo González-Acosta1, Martha Isabel Escobar1, Manuel Fernando Casanova2, Hernán J Pimienta1, Efraín Buriticá1.
Abstract
The von Economo neurons (VEN) are characterized by a large soma, spindle-like soma, with little dendritic arborization at both, the basal and apical poles. In humans, VENs have been described in the entorhinal cortex, the hippocampal formation, the anterior cingulate cortex, the rostral portion of the insula and the dorsomedial Brodmann's area 9 (BA9). These cortical regions have been associated with cognitive functions such as social interactions, intuition and emotional processing. Previous studies that searched for the presence of these cells in the lateral frontal poles yielded negative results. The presence of VENs in other cortical areas on the medial surface of the human prefrontal cortex which share both a common functional network and similar laminar organization, led us to examine its presence in the medial portion of the frontal pole. In the present study, we used tissue samples from five postmortem subjects taken from the polar portion of BA10, on the medial surface of both hemispheres. We found VENs in the human medial BA10, although they are very scarce and dispersed. We also observed crests and walls of the gyrus to quantitatively assess: (A) interhemispheric asymmetries, (B) the VENs/pyramidal ratio, (C) the area of the soma of VENs and (D) the difference in soma area between VENs and pyramidal and fusiform cells. We found that VENs are at least seven times more abundant on the right hemisphere and at least 2.5 times more abundant in the crest than in the walls of the gyrus. The soma size of VENs in the medial frontopolar cortex is larger than that of pyramidal and fusiform cells of layer VI, and their size is larger in the walls than in the crests. Our finding might be a contribution to the understanding of the role of these neurons in the functional networks in which all the areas in which they have been found are linked. However, the particularities of VENs in the frontal pole, as their size and quantity, may also lead us to interpret the findings in the light of other positions such as van Essen's theory of tension-based brain morphogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: area 10; frontopolar cortex; fusiform cells; human cerebral cortex; interhemispheric asymmetry; medial prefrontal cortex; pyramidal cells; von Economo neurons
Year: 2018 PMID: 30127726 PMCID: PMC6087737 DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2018.00064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
Figure 1(A) Medial surface of the human frontal lobe. The yellow boxes show the cortical regions in which von Economo neurons (VENs) have been identified in previous studies: dorsomedial area 9 and anterior cingulate cortex. The red box shows the place where we took tissue samples in the present study, which is located on the medial surface of the frontal pole. (B) Microphotograph of a tissue section of human medial area 10 immunostained with anti-NeuN from the pial surface to the white matter. In the image, the cortical layers and the sublamination of layer V are indicated. The density of pyramidal cells decreases in the deeper part of layer V (Vb), and conversely, the soma area increases. Magnification 10×, scale bar = 200 μm. (C) Diagram of a tissue section stained with anti-NeuN showing the crest and walls of a cortical gyrus. The red boxes show the approximate location of the grids (1500 μm wide × 300 μm thick) for the neuronal counts on sublayer Vb. WM: white matter.
Figure 2Microphotographs of VENs, pyramidal and fusiform cells in the human medial frontopolar cortex. (A–C) Correspond to photographs taken at different magnifications of the same sector of one of the walls of a gyrus. (D–F) are high-magnification photographs (40×) of a VENs and a pyramidal cell of sublayer Vb, and of a fusiform cell of layer VI. (A) Portion of a tissue section where VENs were found in the wall of a gyrus. The red box shows the sector located between layers IV and VI which will be enlarged on image (B). Magnification 2.5×, scale bar = 500 μm. (B) Microphotograph illustrating a magnification of the red box of image (A). Magnification 10×, scale bar = 100 μm. (C) Microphotograph illustrating a magnification of the red box in image (B). The red arrows indicate two NeuN-positive cells with the typical morphology of VENs identified in sublayer Vb of the medial frontopolar cortex of humans. Magnification 40×, scale bar = 50 μm. (D) Photomicrograph illustrating a VEN of sublayer Vb indicated by the red arrow. (E) Microphotograph illustrating a pyramidal cell of sublayer Vb indicated by the red arrow. (F) Microphotograph illustrating a fusiform cell of layer VI indicated by the red arrow. Scale bar = 50 μm for images (D–F).
Number of von Economo neurons (VENs) per subject in the human medial frontopolar cortex.
| Subject | Number of sections | Number of VENs | Number of pyramidal cells | Ratio | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A/B | CREST | WALL | CREST | WALL | CREST | WALL | |
| 1 | 8/12 | 8.40 (3.59) | 4.33 (0.88) | 328.40 (30.59) | 319.00 (34.87) | 1:39 | 1:74 |
| 2 | 4/12 | 1.50 (0.50) | 1.00* | 354.50 (47.50) | 398.00 | 1:236 | 1:398 |
| 3 | 5/9 | 2.00 (1.00) | 1.00 (0.00) | 446.50 (23.50) | 464.00 (55.77) | 1:223 | 1:447 |
| 4 | 7/12 | 2.20 (0.73) | 2.00 (1.00) | 304.60 (18.45) | 350.00 (27.00) | 1:138 | 1:175 |
| 5 | 9/12 | 1.20 (0.20) | 1.25 (0.25) | 276.80 (8.10) | 343.30 (26.12) | 1:231 | 1:275 |
The table shows the average number of VENs (SE), the average number of pyramidal cells (SE), and the VENs/Pyramidal cells ratio from all the tissue sections with VENs in each sampled subject. The counting grids (1500 μm × 300 μm) were positioned in those sectors where VENs were observed on sublayer Vb, both on the crests and on the walls of the gyri of human medial BA10. A/B: A corresponds to the number of tissue sections with VENs, and B to the number of sampled tissue sections. *Only one of the analyzed tissue sections had VENs in it. For this reason, no dispersion measure is presented. The other data show the number of neurons found in more than one tissue section.
VEN/pyramidal cells ratio between portions of the gyri and between hemispheres of the human medial frontopolar cortex.
| Hemisphere | Number of VENs | Number of pyramidal cells | Ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOTAL | R | 3.68 (0.97) | 339.60 (17.67) | 1:92 |
| L | 1.10 (0.10)* | 350.00 (16.30) | 1:318* | |
| WALL | R | 2.30 (0.54) | 369.40 (28.51) | 1:161 |
| L | 1.00 (0.00)* | 375.30 (13.59) | 1:375* | |
| CREST | R | 4.83 (1.69) | 314.80 (20.37) | 1:65 |
| L | 1.14 (0.14)* | 339.10 (21.85) | 1:297* |
R, Right hemisphere; L, Left hemisphere; Ratio, VENs/Pyramidal cells proportion. The table shows the average number of VENs (SE), the average number of pyramidal cells (SE), and the VENs/Pyramidal cells ratio from all the tissue sections with VENs in each hemisphere, both on the crests and on the walls of the gyrus of human medial BA10. *Statistically significant interhemispheric differences both in the average number of VENs and in the VEN/pyramidal ratio (.
Figure 3Comparison of the soma area of VENs, pyramidal and fusiform cells. (A) Neuronal size per hemisphere. There were no statistically significant inter-hemispheric differences in the area of VENs, pyramidal and fusiform cells. The area of the soma of VENs is greater with respect to that of pyramidal and fusiform cells (*p < 0.05). (B) Neuronal area per gyrus portion. There are differences in the area of VENs according to their regional location, being greater in the walls than in the crests of the gyri (**p < 0.01). VENs were larger when compared to pyramidal and fusiform cells, in both portions of the gyri (***p < 0.001). In the latter, there were no differences related to their location along a gyrus.