| Literature DB >> 31058148 |
Jonathan Boulanger-Weill1, Germán Sumbre2.
Abstract
Neurogenesis persists during adulthood in restricted parts of the vertebrate brain. In the optic tectum (OT) of the zebrafish larva, newborn neurons are continuously added and contribute to visual information processing. Recent studies have started to describe the functional development and fate of newborn neurons in the OT. Like the mammalian brain, newborn neurons in the OT require sensory inputs for their integration into local networks and survival. Recent findings suggest that the functional development of newborn neurons requires both activity-dependent and hard-wired mechanisms for proper circuit integration. Here, we review these findings and argue that the study of neurogenesis in non-mammalian species will help elucidate the general mechanisms of circuit assembly following neurogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: activity-dependent development; neurogenesis; newborn neurons; optic tectum; visual system; zebrafish
Year: 2019 PMID: 31058148 PMCID: PMC6477100 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2019.00057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Neuroepithelial neurogenesis in the post-embryonic OT. (A) Organization of the neurogenesis niche in the OT at 5 dpf. Left panel: dorsal view of the brain representing the main sub-divisions. The blue shaded region represents the TPZ. The dashed red line indicates the cross-section plane in the right panel. Right panel: schematic cross-section of one OT hemisphere showing in red the neuroepithelial her5-positive territory, in blue the TPZ and in green the radial glia her4-positive territory. The PML provides the developing tectum with progenitor cells that are progressively pushed upward toward the OT. The thin dashed line represents the separation between the neuropil and the periventricular zone containing most of the neuronal cell bodies. The scale bar represents 50 μm. (B) Organization of the neurogenesis niche in the OT in the adult zebrafish (older than 3 months). Left panel: dorsal view of the brain representing the main sub-divisions. The high-rate proliferation area is depicted in blue according to Ito et al. (2010). Orientations as in (A). Right panel as in (A) showing the reduction of the her5-positive territory. The scale bar represents 100 μm. (C) Neurogenic sequences in the post-embryonic OT. The her5-positive neuroepithelial pool divides at low rates and generates progenitors in the TPZ with high mitotic activity, which in turn generate her4-positive radial glia (major route) or neurons (minor direct route). Radial glia are transiently neurogenic in the OT (non-neurogenic radial glia are outlined in black). Although both routes contribute to the neuronal lineage, their relative contribution to neuronal diversity and their dynamics in post-embryonic stages are unknown. Three representative neuronal subtypes are shown: a superficial interneuron (top), a peri-ventricular projection neuron (right, output to other brain regions indicated by the dashed arrow) and a bi-stratified interneuron (left). PCNA expression is indicated by the blue bar. Dashed arrows indicate lineage relationships. L: left, R: right, A: anterior, P: posterior, D: dorsal, V: ventral, OB: olfactory bulb, Tel: telencephalon, Hb: habenula, Cb: cerebellum, HB: hindbrain, Np: neuropil, TSc: torus semicircularis, Teg: tegmentum, V: ventricle, PML: peripheral midbrain layer, TPZ: tectal proliferation zone. Adapted with permission from Galant et al. (2016).
FIGURE 2Functional development of OT neurons. (A) Maturation time-course of initial tectal neurons from 0 to 10 dpf. After primary neurogenesis has set the initial neuronal scaffold, retinal axons invade the OT, the first visual responses in tectal neurons are observed and the eye’s lens starts forming. Then, secondary neurogenesis continuously supplies the OT with newborn neurons. Neurons born in the early phase of secondary neurogenesis show rapid structural development, acquiring mature dendritic arborization and post-synaptic densities in 4 days (Niell et al., 2004). RF development is a longer process requiring the temporal synchronization of inhibitory and excitatory RFs, which is complete at 9 dpf. This refinement persists in juvenile stages with the reduction of RF width at up to ∼18 dpf (Bergmann et al., 2018). Direction selectivity is already present in early tectal responses, indicating that this property does not require any pruning of initial erroneous connections in order to emerge. This suggests that activity-independent and hard-wired mechanisms enable the formation of direction-selective neuronal responses in the OT. (B) Maturation time-course of newborn neurons born at 4 dpf. During an initial sensitive period following newborn neuron generation (blue shade, from 5 to 10 dpf), sensory experience is required to promote neuronal survival. During this initial period, retinal inputs are also required for functional integration into local networks. Newborn neurons acquire mature dendritic arborization and receptive fields during the first 4 days of development. However, the newborn neurons studied in Boulanger-Weill et al. (2017) show weak direction selectivity, suggesting either slower functional development or biased labeling of non-direction-selective neurons. Functional connectivity increased until 8 dpf and decreased thereafter, suggesting pruning of connections among nearby neurons with different receptive fields. Dashed bars indicate lack of information in the literature. Shaded bars indicate the maturation time-course. The length of each bar is indicative of the measurements performed in the literature. Gray indicates immature stage while green indicates complete maturation. For (A), complete maturation indicates that no further refinement has been observed. For (B), complete maturation indicates that newborn neurons have developed similar properties as mature tectal neurons. dpf: days post-fertilization.