Literature DB >> 31275117

Patterned Vascularization of Embryonic Mouse Forebrain, and Neuromeric Topology of Major Human Subarachnoidal Arterial Branches: A Prosomeric Mapping.

Luis Puelles1, Rafael Martínez-Marin1, Pedro Melgarejo-Otalora1, Abdelmalik Ayad1, Antonios Valavanis2, José Luis Ferran1.   

Abstract

The prosomeric brain model contemplates progressive regionalization of the central nervous system (CNS) from a molecular and morphological ontogenetic perspective. It defines the forebrain axis relative to the notochord, and contemplates intersecting longitudinal (zonal, columnar) and transversal (neuromeric) patterning mechanisms. A checkboard pattern of histogenetic units of the neural wall results, where each unit is differentially fated by an unique profile of active genes. These natural neural units later expand their radial dimension during neurogenesis, histogenesis, and correlative differential morphogenesis. This fundamental topologic framework is shared by all vertebrates, as a Bauplan, each lineage varying in some subtle aspects. So far the prosomeric model has been applied only to neural structures, but we attempt here a prosomeric analysis of the hypothesis that major vessels invade the brain wall in patterns that are congruent with its intrinsic natural developmental units, as postulated in the prosomeric model. Anatomic and embryologic studies of brain blood vessels have classically recorded a conserved pattern of branches (thus the conventional terminology), and clinical experience has discovered a standard topography of many brain arterial terminal fields. Such results were described under assumptions of the columnar model of the forebrain, prevalent during the last century, but this is found insufficient in depth and explanatory power in the modern molecular scenario. We have thus explored the possibility that brain vascularization in rodents and humans may relate systematically to genoarchitectonic forebrain subdivisions contemplated in the prosomeric model. Specifically, we examined first whether early vascular invasion of some molecularly characterized prosomeric domains shows heterochrony. We indeed found a heterochronic pattern of vascular invasion that distinguishes between adjacent brain areas with differential molecular profiles. We next mapped topologically on the prosomeric model the major arterial branches serving the human brain. The results of this approach bear on the possibility of a developmentally-based modern arterial terminology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  arterial branching; arterial topology; brain arteries; molecular profile; penetrating vessels; terminal fields

Year:  2019        PMID: 31275117      PMCID: PMC6593354          DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2019.00059

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Neuroanat        ISSN: 1662-5129            Impact factor:   3.856


  11 in total

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Review 4.  Established, New and Emerging Concepts in Brain Vascular Development.

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Review 6.  The behavior and functions of embryonic microglia.

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Review 7.  Cephalic/cardiac neural crest cell and moyamoya disease.

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Journal:  Neuroradiol J       Date:  2021-06-02

8.  Heightened activation of embryonic megakaryocytes causes aneurysms in the developing brain of mice lacking podoplanin.

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Review 9.  SCO-spondin, a giant matricellular protein that regulates cerebrospinal fluid activity.

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10.  Tissue factor pathway inhibitor is required for cerebrovascular development in mice.

Authors:  Susan A Maroney; Randal J Westrick; Audrey C Cleuren; Nicholas D Martinez; Amy E Siebert; Mark Zogg; David Ginsburg; Hartmut Weiler; Alan E Mast
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2021-01-14       Impact factor: 22.113

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